West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 Jul 1914, p. 2

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r} l k, I i 'uit When n phyliciln or armpathetie layman advise. n change at air, we do not. take him too Hardly. But an investigator for the Carnegie Institution at Washington bu nude errpertuertta which seem to - that the familiar preacrip- don needs an even broader eon- Itrnction than we give it. The growing of forest trees on wane land can in mogt cues be nude . profitable' tmdtsetaking, be- idea providing labor to n oonnidor able Inn-hr of non, yd no enun- dw reforestation, ha, a yet been NOTES AND COMMENTS ing, and the Dominion Forestry Mach in the hot and yur dis- tribuhd - 4,000,000 trees from the numeric. at Indisn Head for ”allot. planing in mum Oun- done in emu CM. the city's Inter supply. In mwy cl the counties of eastern Canada, however, are [use um of waste Und, originally forested, and cap:- Me only of producing forests. Ott- tario has 5 Counties Reforestation [In making possible the mquisition of such waste had tor reforestation purposes by municipal councils, but up to the realm time only on. county-bu "cilia! 2.311335% op rtumty. Quebec min- i: (30chan have also paced Wit.» yr “rout-r "tt PW- We 9n muted that there is lit- tle Menace in the composition of air in vnrioue locolitien, and that in small diftermsee there in he: no oorative value. Good nit is open and bed: air; bad air is confined air. It we get out into the open, end away from the dust and smoke and fume: that pollute air in crowded places, we obtain all the chase of air that in neceeury or possible. to purchase and reforest large area on the watersheds governing their water-supply have advan- tageously used the some kind of labor. The primary purpose of such reforestation is not, however, to furnish work to the unemployed, but to develop a profiUWle source of revenue from land which would otherwise remain unproductive. Cjty forests of this kind are not, as yet, in vogue in this country. Perhaps the only city forest in Can- ada is that at Guelph, Ont., when a small area has been phutod sur- rounding the springs yhicll furnish A similar idea has been worked out successfully by the city of Ban Diego in California. which possess- es 7,000 acres of bare rolling sand land at I. distance of ten miles from the city. A trained forester was engaged to make this land profit- yielding, and under his direction the city's unemployed have been given work planting this area with trees suitable to the nsture of the country. Other cities in the United States that have {pundit necessary of replanting with trees the waste lands of the state. At one prison alone 25,000 trees, mostly American uh and pine were planted in 1913, and so successful have these Planta- tions been that this work will be considerably extended in the pre- sent "e. .. . . . ' Yet it is desirable to so lather Ale!!! for . charge of air, metapho- ritually speaking, became change of seene, orenvironment, of habits, d moral atmosphere, u benetieUl at certain times. Rest, freedom, the holiday spirit and recreation Ire onions the elements which make the chenged air so good for the sys- Australian Convicts Itetoreat Five llnndred Aorta. According to a recent report of the Forestry Department of New South Wales, good conduct con- victs at the state prison, instead of breaking stone, are now engaged in the more useful and healthful work The Candid Friend. . Mitre Suphuidpvl should ind like to see the Inn that I'd pro- mi.. to ion. honor and obey. do“ Partir-Pan adm you would u. Teach your girl to swim. It will make her supple, lithe, and strong, and self-reliant. For when she is beyond her depth she has only her own arms and legs and nerve to depend on. And knowing how to swim may save her life. Practical- ly every one that was saved from the Empress of Ireland could swim. Teach yourself to swim, it you do not know already. You cannot be too old nor too young to enjoy it. It is the beat fun in the world, and it may save your life some time. A Teach your boy to swim. It is the best exercise in the world in an summer. It develops the chest, improves the wind, and strengthens the heart. A boy who does much swimming can't smoke many cigar- eues, became swimming is about the severest test of wind there is. Besides, if your boy knows how to torim it will likely save his life some time. It a wanna would cut on St lininer’a expendvo amnion- pin I $10 bill in In: hair ah. yoddl attract lot. in“ , can. They no, us 3 rule, elements we cannot find in the air a home. Thus 5 physical paradox becomes a medical and moral truth. PRI NON [IRS PIA NT FORESTER Never did may other funily of or- Phan woodohucke fare no well! Be- side. the clover and the sorrel, there were tender Jeane of 1m, end the juicy pods of pen, end bits of carrot. All the funk grew round and fat, In their mother had been, and all of them followed Louis round; and whenever the cook wood let them, they would crud in behind the dove end ood.. dle together and sleep. - Youth’s Companion. That is the way Louis got his lit- tle family. Two or three times I. day he had to feed them, but he felt paid when he new how quickly they began to lose their fear of him. In 5 week he could take them out of the cage and handle them n he could the kitten, and in two weeke they would run all round the "rd, picking e dainty clover lee! here and a little sorrel there, but elven ready to come running when u whistled to than It than made him luughtoeeethem “up but, whenhewhiebled.toeeevhere he "a ”new stunt!- o- - Louis asked no more questions. That afternoon he went to work with a spade at the corner of the carriage house. It took him until nearly night, but when he finished, he had three little balls of fur, with frightened black eyes that watched every move he'mnde. The garden- er found an old squirrel cage in, the Mt, and into it they put the three orphans, with a big bunch of fresh clover; and in the morning tht.. doyer _was gone. "I'm Afraid they will, unless somebody killer them - or feeds them." "Why, that old woodohuck had a family. There are three young ones in the hole under the carriage house. I saw them all out together the -trtlter.day," said the gardener. "Will the.vUtarve to dearth " ask ed Louis, much troubled. Three Orphan. The Bradford: had settled in their ammo: home nearly a week when Louis, looking up from his book one afternoon o little before unmet, a“ I small brown head pop out from under the corner of the curiage house. To be sure. he had heard the gar- dener say that woodehueks destroy green vegetables; but when he Jock- ed, after breakfast, he could find none that seemed to have been nib- bled; and when he went to see what the little animal had been eating when he shot it, he found ony a patch of clover. 7 "What about the young ones I" asked the gardener that noon. At first the only thing that he could think of was a at, for he had heard his father any 5t breakfast that um had been getting into the grain. But he kept very still, and in a little while the head poked out farther, and then the whole body followed, and he saw that the ani- mal was much larger than a rat. In fact, it was as large a a. full-grown cat or a small dog. It had a round, fat body covered with grayilh- brown hair, and a. broad head with small ears that hardly showed at Louis raised the little riffi, slow- ly, rested the barrel against the cor- ner of the house, took careful aim', and pulled the trigger. At the re- port he saw something flop, and ran to the edge of the grass plot. There lay the woodehuek, still now, and looking up at Louis with glazing eyes. as if to say. "Why did you do it l" And then the eyes closed, and the woodehuek was dead. "Young “ones l" asked Louis "wlytt young ones?" But one morning he waited very early, and looking out of his win, dow, saw the woodohuck feeding in plain sight on the grass plot behind the house. In the corner stood the little rifle that had come to Louis', older bro- ther as a Christmas present, and on a shelf near by stood the box of cartridges. Louis had been allow- Very quietly he slipped over to the corner, took down the box of cartridges. and slipped one of them into the rifle. Then, harefooted, he tiptoed downstairs, carefully slid the bolt of the back door, and step- ped out. Stealing to the corner of the house, he looked round. Yes, the woodehuek was still there, and still feeding! It had not been alarmed. Louis went back to the house; but instead of feeling proud of What he had done, he began to ask himself why he had done it, and he could not find any good answer. .. With little runs of a foot or two at a time, the creature ventured farther and farther away from the corner of the carriage house; tusd then, to Louia't astonishment, it When Louis told the gardener what he had seen. the old man laughed, and said he guessed it was only a woodohuek, and that they would see him again before long; but although Louis watched for se- veral days, he saw nothing more of the brown head or the fat, round all stood up on its hind quarters, with its forepnws hanging down in front, and looked all about, to see whe- ther it WIS safe to go any farther. But just. then Louis leaned too far forward in his eagerness to see, and his book slipped to the floor of the piazza with a. loud slam. At that, the strange animal flashed back out of sight into his hole so quickly that, it looked like a. mere brown streak. ed to use the rifle when he was with his brother. but had never tried it alone. Now, he thought, his chance had come. Many Members of the Guelph Fam- lly Have Buttered. The accident to the Princess Fred- erika of Hanover, the sister of the Duke of Cumberland, near Bur.. ritz, the other day, is a reminder of the fatal part that the anhoqobip has played in the Guelph family In the, 90mm oi the 1.59qu yea-g. _ so atrectard by this and by oth.e.r oourtesiea shown in connection with the burial that he quite unexpected- ly sent. his younger son, Prince Er- neat August, to express his grati- tude in person st the royal palace pt Potsdam. This was the tirst meeting of. Guelph with a Ho‘henzollern since Benover, (the Guelph state), was annexed to Prussia in 1686. It was also the occasion of ' short. meet- in; between tho Prince and the Kaiser’s only dsughrter, Princess Victoria Louise, which was the ffrst scene in their romahtic much, sad the hat step bowsrds the reconcilia- tion of the two familitiea. Prince William of Cumberland, the elder brother of the present Duke of Brunswick, wee killed in an accident to the auto which he was driving neu- Berlin in May, 1912. The Kaiser sent an impres- eive license of sympebhy to the Prince’s tether, and the latter wee The batman! was at Karlsruhe last spring. The festivities were the occasion of another unto wei- deut in which the auto driven by the Prince’s future brrthot-ia-Ud; Prince Adalbon qt PM m 16. So the last shall be first, and the first hssb-See introductory paragraph. I do thee no wrong: didst not thou agree with me for a shilling? -m was receiving the wages for which he had contracted, and in one sense it was no concern of his how much the others received. The details of this parable cannot, how- ever, 'ts pressed. 16. Is thine eye evil because I am good I-vit thou jealous because I am generous l" - - 13. He answered and said to one of them-Addressing, probably, the spokesman of the group of those who. among themselves, had been murmuring against, his seeming in. justice. NEW" scum [Essen The scorching heat-This was sometimes so severe as to drive la- borers from the held (James l. ll; 2 Kings 4. 19). 10. The first . . . supposed that thev would receive more - That was only natural, because of the much longer time they had labored, and therefore the greater amount of work they had accomplished. 12. The burden of the' day-The full, day's work. - fl 7 he”. I. The Laborers in the Vine- yard, Matt. so. 1-". Golden Text, Matt. 5.45. Verse l. A man that was shone- holder-The manager, or perhaps. the owner, of an estate. One who had authority to hire and dismiss laborers. Beginning from the last unto the frrst--This order was unusual. Per.. haps, since this is only a story, it was simply told so for the purpose of bringing out the moral, or the lesson which the whole story was intended to teach. 6. The eleventh hour - Five o'eloek, an hour before the day's work closed. Why stand ye here all the day idle l-Their willingness to go to work as soon as employment was offered to them shows that they were not idle men from choice. Perhaps this is true of many "idlerss" of our own day, though the chief difheultv, no doubt, lies in the fact that men, and women also, have not been trained for use- ful employment in which there is a demand for workers. 8. And when even was come-Ac, cording to Dent. 24. 15, laborers were to be paid every day before the sun set. The prodigal son en- vied "the hired servants" who re- ceived their daily compensation. Into his vineyard-The care of the vineyards was one of the chief occupations of Palestine. 2. A shilling-Literally. a, dena- rious. Under Tiberius two think of a dennrius was the pay of a Roman soldier. The amount paid to these laborers was considered K' liberal daily wage at. that time, and was suiheient to supply the necessaries of life. 7 . 3. About the third 1iour--Thtd is, at. nine o’clock in the forenoon. A day meant twelve hours, extending from 6 mm. to 6 pan. (John li.. to 4. Whatsoever is right I will give you-No definite agreement is made with these laborers as with the first. There is simply a. promise of fair payment. These men are glad to get employment, and at once begin their work. ' -s. The sixth and the ninth hour-- Twelve o'clock and three o'clock in the afternoon. The lord of this vinixvard--Thtst is, the householder, mentioned in verse 1. His steward-An assistant in the management of the estate who paid the laborers for their work. (Com- pare Luke 8. 3; Gal. 4. 2.) Who went out early iq the morn- ing-When the g‘pee were ready to be gethered, many laborer: would be required in order that the fruit might be "cared for " once, so that there would be no loss. _ Standing in the marketplace idle --As in our cities to-day, the un- employed were accustomed to con- gregate in the public aqueros, which in the cities of Palestine were the marketplaces. The child- re;1 also gathered there (Luke T, 32 . 1t"INP3 FATAL T0 ROYALTIES. INTERNATIOXAL LESSON, 2 ULY a. ONTARIO ARCHIVES ' TORONTO And it is easier to see some people than it is through a glut eye. .' .Mr.. Gariepy was an alderman of his City from 1907 to 1910. He is a director of the Edmonton Chil- dren's Aid Society. president of the Alberta Union of Municipalities; secretary of Edmonton Canadian Club, and president of the French- Canadian Congress of Alberta. In 1904 he was a. school trustee, and has been elected every year since. In 1907 he was; president of St. Jean Baptiste Society, and in 1911 a Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus. Be is a. member of three clubs, Edmonton, Northern and Canadian, and a Roman Catholic in religion. The new Minister has a pleading manner, and on a recent tour of the Province with other Miniaters of the legislature he made nanny friends. He ia brimful of humor, hast a. good'leomlnand of English, and u a. platform add dtterdinner spake]; is _very populbr: VN ”inst think how%iriiGi" BF. gued the young man._ "I believe," aid the beautiful heiress, "that the luppiut mar- ries.“ we ytydy by opppitti' Going to Alberta in 1892, young Gariepy was associated with his father in business in Edmonton. Ill health prevented him-from tak- ing up his chosen profession till 1903, when he began the practice of law under the firm name of Tay- lor, Boyle, and Gamiepy, afterward Gariepy and Landry, and finally as at present, Gariepy, Giroux, and Dunlop, of Edmonton. fur. Garievpy in married and has three sons and one doughtor. Hi. home is at 537 Hardin): Avenue, Bdmontom-Maar. McD. in Star Weekly. . _ , _ "Yes; Iitold him atrourit thin morning and he explained it “tie- fectorily. I think it quite a credit to him, too." “Whetdid he any?” ' “He said he they. filled the jug so mu thet‘there were no room on the top tor cream I” len ayytthere being ndeream a the artirlr1", In " the young man was educated " St. Laurent College, Montreal Semi- nary, Laval University, and finally graduated in law from McGill Uni- versity. band," . 'did you wk Gthd%jii, So wrote Dr. A. O. Mache, of the Honorable Wilfred Gariepy, in his history of Alberta. Since the above was written Mr. Gariepy has more than ever won for himself a, place on the merit axrll of distin- guished men in the Province of Al- berta. In 1913 he was the success- ful candidate for the Legislature as representative for Beaver River, one orthe northern constituencies of the Province. In November of last year the subject of this brief sketch was sworn in as Minister of Municipal Affairs for Alberta, and re-elected by acclamation as mem- ber for Beaver River in December of the same year. o,rerrasboriatust-tro.trar1tt who. In the course of the week of wedding festivities in Berlin on tFo occasion of the wedding, there Pero seven! other auto accident; in which royalty was involved, chief among them one in which the Duke orCumbeeuad's auto was oomN5rtt- ed. This accident was the etbuae of the decision a; the Duke of Bruno- wok at tro durum hour to change one of the patents offered by King Georan English-made touring 'sutxr-in favor of something less po- tentially dangerous. the pubiic, dim is a, discriminat- ing :1:th ami-. tpithy, sdti,',t gals ea ther,-tisttt ki of true mm thedisao of the brass. In the possession ' 'admirable qualities of' mind and heart, in holding marked precedence u a distinguished mem- ber of the legal protession, and in being a man of high attainments and 2tistintruisyettexemttilre ability, Mr. Gariapy hallengea attention me one :i'il',ll,17ls" eligible, for represen- tation in thii-eompilakion, while his earnest and upright career and his position at; man of affairs but served to rénder the more conson- ant, an epitome of his life history in this conrrection." -- . mrnHWrtdfr'ttrhsps, Member of 'hererta Cabinet. ."Biorryphf. 'hould treat Ct the lives of those whose worth, socially. morally, any! intellectually, com- mands the ignequivocal _ yespeqt 9f wBdrn at Montreal on March 14, 1877, the son of Jos. H. Gariepy, ”it ha; beer: said that never since has either father or son been seen In an sutunobile. No Boo-a left. "Tiyer," Mid the yqung lye- A CLEVER YOUNG MAN. Hon. Wilfred Garicpy. Ills Chloe. 2tttrt '1: nova . . , tne tt to“ th ' "' _ 'tth M. " Cabin 'dt - -_""- -e--'-ee'e'V “'9 with: Paulina coat in know: u the' _ a. t occurs in a resin was min i. unknowh, ind cup- plie'l 1t!/8tutt,PP'rtatre tr cuppog-t am! bar. The helm, or helmet, forms over the mountain when 5 violent wind, known u the helm- p'ingl, u blowing; the but were I mile or two to leeward. ' At Cullen; on the coat. of Pym, Clouds Take Odd Shapes - lll- Smelling F'ogtr-LlrhtstIng. Cloud caps form on mountain tops when a. current of moist air ascends the slope obthe mountain, for the air cool: as it rim and the moiature in it condenses, any: Youth', C aion. On the flat top of Table gunman, near Cape- Town, a strong noutheut wind pro- duces a huriwnm eheet of cloud known as the tablecloth. This cloud on... appear- to pour over the sleep leeward side of the mountain like u mighty cataract. The “spreading of the tablecloth” u a in of bad weather. -Atah'ttlodi.. time hom the mountain s ”and cloud otten (dune. A similar ir 9! clone}: eeen your 'lh'lT)tlr?,'T, Ilse-Ila. Insomnia. uni dimly lack A cleep.‘ It may be ot any degree, from the totally sleeping nights that the French cell unite bunches, or "white night," to a slight dim- inution in the rest the sufferer think. he ought to hue. Even the soundeet sleepers know something ebout bad nights, for it is impoen siblef to maintain I. perfect equili-, Irrium" of health all the time, Ind sometimes the equilibrium will be mUheiently diatrurbed to banish sleep for the time. One characteristic of nightmare is the startling reality of it. It lacks the misty vagueness of pleas- ant dreams, and has, while it lasts, all the sharp outline of tn actual oc- currence. Therefore it is import- ant that young children should be wisely and gently handled when they suffer from night terrors. Do not scold them, or laugh at them, or argue with them. They have suf- fered a real shock with a conse- quent loss of nervous force. Until the paroxysm has spent itself, do not leave a child who has suffered in this way alone. - M - Sometimes, in older children, nightmare accompanies overpres- sure at school, and the tendency to it disanpears in the holidavs. In such cues, lighten the pressure of work as much as possible, make the evening men-1 light and digestible, and keep the child from excitement during the few hours before bed- time.--Youth's Companion. "night terror." The child Intakes suddenly from a. deep sleep, pant- ing, wide eyed, screaming but in- articulate. and clings frantically to anyone who goes to the bedside. Such attacks age most common in children betieiin four and eight years old, but they may occur at any age. A nightmare is a very vivid and disagreeable dream, in which the sleeper finds himself in various ter. rifying situations from which there is no escape. When the sufferer’s fright reaches a climax, he awakens suddenly; sometimes he is aroused by his own efforts to scream for help. A bad form of nightmare oc- curs in young children; it is called Some people are sleepless because they have overeaten, 5nd some be- cause they are underfed. The late supper, or the cup of tea or coffee taken too late in the day, must be given up in one one; a. cup of hot milk, sipped slowly, will often give relief in the other. Remember, too, that moderate wakefulness in a cool, well-ventilated room is less harmful to the system than a. heavy, drugged slumber in an overwarmed and stuffy room. When grown-up peope have nightmare, it is generally owing to indiscretions in diet, such ad mince pie or lobster eaten late at night. Many persons have to be very care- ful about what they eat tor supper, and can never safely go to sleep ly- ing flat on the back. It is the good sleeper who frets It an occasional wakeful night, and begins to worry over eymtoms, and talk abdut hypnotics. The poor sleeper, on the other Und, usual-[y achieves a philosophy that enables him to lie awake hour after hour, and make little fuss obouf, it, . As a matter of fact, sleep u in large measure a habit. to which many other habits. both good and bad, contribute. If children sit, up too Ute, and, above all, if they are permitted to get excited at bedtime, they may acquire a lifelong habit of light and restless sleep. It is an excellent plan for adults, as well as children. to keep the last hours of the day tmqquil. _ . . When the loss of sleep is not ex- ceulve, it is best to rested it " one of the inevitable incident; of ex-istance. If the wakehd person keepa reaaomsbly calm aboutit, he will discover that what he has lost is gradually made up on other nights, and that one or two bad night, do not pun “insomnia.” NATI'RAL PHENOMENA. I J Nightmare. Dimcullics ot Sending Them Have Been Overcome. It might well seem impossible to send a telegram in 1 written Ian guege that has no elphebet but is made up of a, vast number of cher- ncters, no two of which no alike. Not only is the Chineee languege composed of seven] thousand dit- ferent dusraeteru, but there are so may dialects spoken in Chine that there ere more than I. hundred way-“0&0 Cir, 5:an tet, chanc- ter, tt written may. is uniform than?“ the can”. How is it pond!) to eend e tale. gram 'uoueiholaesdaodmsettataer. gauge! The dinmtitim hue been very ingeniounly outcome, and it in now Meier and _leee expend“ to undetelegrunzn Chine-em in n every In me were is e 11itr_tiorur, 'or model code, a “the WM ell-tic. tern are lied 5nd unbound. “New ue plea-lo: W chum, bet Ema-"lb? of (but no u M Over the water of the Boy of Cha- leur, in Conrado, a mysterioius Phe- nomenon known as the firtthi? is sometimes seen by night. It Is I. roughly hemispherictd mass of In- minosity, with its fhrt side to the water, but sometimes it rises in slender moving columns that re- semble the fltuning rigging of a ship. It is supposed to foretell , storm. No satisfactory explanation of the phenomenon has ever been given. _ Andes lightning is the name given to a very striking luminous dis- charge of electricity seen over the crest of the Andes, in Chili, in a region where ordinary thunder- stoma are almost unknown. The mountains appear to not. us gigan- tie lightning rods, between which and the clouds silent discharge: take place on a. vast scale. often visited by a, very warm and dry wind, known as the fohn. The effects of this wind are particularly striking in winter. The snow melts and evaporates as if by magic; woodwork becomes as dry as tinder, and great precautions are necessary to prevent the occurrence of the disastrous fires known as tohn fires, that often destroy yrhole towns and villages. No cooking is permitted while the fohn is blowing, and not even a. pipe or a cigarette may be lighted. Many persons safer with fohn sickness whenever this wind prevails. The chinook of the wes- tern United Buttes is similar in character and origin to the fohn. cleavnness in speech, unaeliishness, service, good manners, these and all other virtues are taught in Christian homes to-day as earnestly and possibly as effectively as in any other day. Sometimes, as we study the moral situation of the present, there comes the fear that our dis- tinctively Christian ideals of virtue and conception of right and duty are giving place to the Grecian. If such be the fact, then, of course, the moral training in the home must suffer a. like deterioration. But this hardly enters into our present problem, and the fact remains to cheer us that the home is on active and potent force in the moral de- velopment of the children. The Home- Should Have Cttrkttatt Parents Who Know God and Are Under the Power of the Spirit These considerations-the con- spicuou-s absence of formal family religion, the new Sunday habits, the new home life. the fact that the Sunday school is not responsible The cameo which have worked for the decrease of parental instruction in religion have not wrought the some havoc with parental instrue- tion in morals. Unquestionably there is much moral training in the home. It my not be of the formal sort, not is deliberate in purpose, nor as conspicuously labeled as was the older instruction, but as real, a purposeful, as wholesome, and H reeultful as any that has preced- books, professed-1y or actually re- ligious, which through Sunday school, parish and other libraries, or by actual purchase, fiml their way into the home. This religious reading may be thought to 5 large extent poor in quality and worse in effect. Yet it may be safely said that its influence th, on the whole good and potent. No one properly understands the problem of home religious education who does not give . Urge place to the power-the not power. actual and ooteatur-- of the religious periodical and book Pty!", MORAL 1RhNl% IN HOMES There ie 3 oormiderahle amount of ' {or the neglect of religium religious and moral education ott- in the home, but may h- ll uined in the home, for which the it ; the wide are: of the hm home my be eddvto be indirectiy culum, the power actual a. resrponaribler. here are a Urge of the religious press fur 1 number of religious newepepere, lig'ioue training, and man, end a vest amount of religion: mat- rel education now actual ter in 'recuUr newepepere. and the these considerations an. Ir. sphere of influenee for the” paper: be kept prominently in nm is at home. There are innumerable .tumpt to solve our prom. CHINESE TELEGRAMS. Truthfulness, Sobriety, One of the new mull blouses u- made with a fUring organdy of ul under which is drawn a tie of ln‘mk tulle--a fold of the buck tulle int f in inch wide. The tie ends in a 121* eel of colored bends. which give Jmi the desirable dash of brightness m the blouse. "tbreuered Pique Walsh-oat. Waistcoat: made of narr. u atripe pique are smart odditiwm to the urge or trabardine strut suit. They are often embroidvml in white cotton, sometimes scallop ed about the edges. One of (he "nettle-t. however, in made a ithout embroidery. The edge- are bound with white braid. The waisw a: buttons high in the neck and 3'} the way down to the waist with m white crochet buttons. Two pawl. pockets, bound with the braid fin ~31 it. Embroidered We. Some of the exclusive furrir " are now making a specialty of sumnu r furs to wen at mountain and w .17 side rewm. These furs are usua' 1y made up in combination u H: chiffon. so that their weight um! warmth ue minimized. One u: tmtive collar u mule of Strips pf dyed yellow tox {leaned on a >e-u‘: bmwn ehiBon ' A muff In mud}, with more Chilton than fur t it: makeup, is sold with the ol r. Embroidered sponge waist, I wr~ ere very dentin, upocidly “H" White mt ottita. The embroidery is done in ooh" that would haw been called Nigeria: a you tr) two "tr-in big, irregular desigm Myamu anally a." mad" to button that above, the waist. and mm d pique they mn- _ aim: Suit. for null boy- ue made of Vii. MIG Ind poplin with collars and "fhot_ear tkotehyltid. Tu 'we M was new“W 't "We ' My nu oblizm " 99 new by (to intend mm they pocket: Stockings printed with any flo '" from knee to ankle are sham: In some of the beat shops: They than“ duty be worn with u'mr frock and with white ohoel. Sumo thneeeo-. sample clinches m diameter. Kandy cover the wk “brie of the Mac, and Bome- . " don't think a college ed,”- tlon mount- to c “at deal." - "Doat't I”! l, I" , you ought NJ foot nu with ttiiG curt little “in can. bu with him and bands of matching plain. Che beaming sin of today is the leaving of God out of the account. The dangerou- hemy of too.) "Pt the notion that men may find (ind without Jeane Christ. he begin- nings of both are to be found in the home, even (lirietinn hnnr‘K Through the neglect try parents of the outward formlitiea of relwxun in the home. an seen in the famfy altar and a blessing at the who. through the more serious nu" "". of giving religious instrur: H, through the fatal neglect of l a ing in character and condcr: w' their children that they knnu _ I. that they WM their hir, My His will, that their sup-amc- elrt, sire ii to love the things He _ m»! and hate the thing! He harm. Shut Jeans in their Saviour. Friend ml Lord of Lite-throutph this 11%" t the children grow up in the sin "s) heresy of hereeies; Gscl it nut in their thoughts and Jesus Christ " not in their lives. The hump “Hew- Christ in enthroned and G .d iv: known is the home in which in nal and religious education in hm , Ir'- meted and brings in» , '1: m _. perfect truit.--Rev "urge ll. Stewart. The My of Parents must not be artifieUl, nor sv-nti. mental, not intellectual, nor f,,irc d. nor trupramumUne, nor unmmd. ful of the value of wise menu It must be all that it u possible for human piety to be-wsrm, thuugln, m. nympathetic, umselfish, taxcful, real, genuine. But what I am nor sa.vintr is that there must be such piety. It ia imlupensab1e if there in to be uny effective rearing of Ilte child in religion through the ag 'li"Y of the home. health is to select your grand. WI," M the best Way for * ehild to obtain the wisest am mm reenltful home training is 1.. h. born into the society and under the "adorning influence of a (mm. in mother and! 1 Christian father. in tho m. but any br, an an}: it; the wide are. of the home cum, ouhun, the power actual and In.“ of the religion: mm; for hunk te. Edou- training, and munfut tthe ral education now actually given- there considerations an lam 1mm be km prominently in mind in my tug-apt“ coin our problem "The beat my to “on” good hodth i, to, telelet your grand. my tGru hill: aid see Bit of PUid ter the Boy. Mi up Printed Stockings. Tulle and Brads. I, ”sink. an: 'une Mk in the Hui: ‘oolunbus. in thc . g part. As usual . Jemima- from [ mi“. the unh- . a entirely lar " 0.3ng. A rep] mm from t'tt'rr ads. and thqu turt.v-futlt your M". i. November next, “than! hare le‘vl Vim- never Pr"'" “an; onnvcneu Quebec The ma} of the city wchum '. telieitous the high ch " eloquem the order. we following: - It the “pm Btewart, high t (0M2. b ch” rwgvr. M, ”urea. high ford (0mm: H, mum-er. Bram Show. superint tioas, BravntCrrd cm. high a “I0 thirty-fifth " Canadian Qt erta. toett. ) Gator, " r Coir, high (009.); H. J (Odd; It (Can; A. (Ont); F. " ooo.), Ilwml oo-Iniww In addilw Beers, din” Holland (Mu district high (XML); " hiqlt sea-rot: ”w prawn The Inmu High Court m, Ntnin. , Jeanna-ate which is the 'erorta rcfer tioo to the " ports that ha to yen in t An interesai (ion with (In is, that eiuc, it ltaas coniin to tho. hour the excellent man of thc t able to row which Mr I “l3. and int.' perk-nee. is. due in tlie ' tounders 'l only lithm deputuu- is shown the order In the insurnncc of the year payment amounting ”5.07107. inlernumz 1. accruing fron lest your " "ancient incl look after th death [and In ituther rt of ieteeat-ertts to our reader order _ bentures A despatch I Germany, at”: for the duration plum carrying created on Wed drama here by German airman the air tor M In BIO COM imma- Ildc' an It John-5mm Leading New Yo A detrpatch (In: The H. B. Clath' and the heading u oompnny_uf the C' the hands of rev: “we: of its inahll mounting to an kn. nut due or q I few days. The 1 can single oomm, man} th ma book, liabil FMGNT l.\‘”l| " I pram bum-it John k least t store: 1 earns M50 “(Wu _, receivers today Henry anemmn tgat: ttty k ur ' , ren.?' has C Brantford (0 high and] b; A. Slum or. Bramfurc at, high rm: v, [1. J, tit, v, R. T. v, A. il p, F. H, In: Mi Similar action. It “a would be won in UN rod. Mr buisness tinned under receive ment until their {man have been adittatod: It.“ a! (in tail LPN MUM I ttillll MANN nr HUM] Mt Tl in the Han tuna when D mm tlst" an: " ll " " " "nt ur" H the rm " Ct ma rder " M " ll

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