It is I adn a ot the 1 in: E! In En: England lots?" Leertm "ding mg. more them Joni“ Cum .1 I an": peel a at! t he lob the W," xi 3. ttrot I b be " " L' "No. Probably he was crusty to 'hrrherouuedhimtorsorriai,t â€H- dough." . Did you mail in the paper where n woman stabbed her husband with a bread We I" . “I don't mind going to bed now," and Elizabeth laughed. "The little lambs are safe in the told." said grandmother as she laid Elizabeth down, "and the little gos- ling: are asleep under the mother's wing. the pretty blue flowers of the lax-plant have closed their petals, and they have-all-gone-to-- sleep." Grandmother's voice was getting softer-nod-softer. Eliza- beth was getting sleepier and sleep- 't.r--aard-suepier. Nos grand- .other‘a voice was still. Elizabeth In fast asleep. thy ther ready for bed now." "I wonder." went on grand~ mother's gentle voice. “what a cer- tain delicate blue flower would any to a little girl who did not know that from the stalks of its plant threads are obtained. and that the threads make the nice white linen for Elizabeth's pillow cover. Eliza, beth'a crib sheets. and Elizabeth's daintv little nightgown l" Mrs. Hiram Often-your recom- mendations are rather poor. I must W. “Well. well'.' exclaimed grand- mother: "I wonder what the little white sheep on the hillside would any to a little girl who did not want to get under the fleeey white blank- ots that were made from the wool taken from their backs 3" Elizabeth stopped crying to listen. "I wonder,' continued grand- mother, “what the - in. the pond would say to a little girl who did not want to lay her curly head on a pillow made from the sch down that grew on their breasts!†Elizabeth climbed up into grand- mother's hp. "Please tell me some more," she coaxed. “You may unbutton the buttons," she added. "I'll gel rec "I wonder," went on her grand- mother, "whn the ailkworms on the mulberry tree would say to . little girl who did not care to use the pretty quilt made from the fine silk threads which took them so long to spin I" Elizabeth drew mother. , Bowl-Tine Story. "I don't want to go to bed," cried Elizabeth. and her face was all puckered up into a ttNPI., _ NOTES AND COMMENTS The golden Me a childhood ap- proaches. Other 30%.â€: are in the setting sun.' ir rubric fades. They are glories of tradition. Childhood,Giee happy. is walking with certain feet. directly toward its golden time. Now it it known and conceded that there is need in the chemistry of youth for eandy. Swo ets are de- nsnded. That is why you wanted - on the bread sud butter. You were right and materna.Gan wss be.. nignsnt but misinformed. Your in- sides were truthfully impelling you to raids on the jam closet and the brown sugar bowl. Loaf sugsr was not much atteeted then and you would not have cared for it anyway. It lacks the body and savor of the old fauhiuned light brown sugar. Yul: wanted sweets tor heat and energy~"tu balance the fats." You were, wise as uld nature itself. The guiden days approach when a rtV tion a! 'sweets shall be handed out to childlmml. The kingdom of candy is its legitimate domain-to be ruled temperately and enjoyed with dis- cretion. but nevertheless to be in- habited. mow caution might be relaxed And a tally pulling had. Waiting for tally to cool in the snow was s long drawn out vexation. Christmas brought another relaxation in the shape of a small mocking full of hard candies. But sweets were “hon, In the old days of bus: tipped, red topped boots, sweets were known to be umrholesome. Craving Kr them In to be killed down by bread and butter or by bread and milk. ;‘Well, if you don't want to at that good bread and butter, you‘re not hungry, that's all."., A plea for a little sugar on it not adamantine refusal. It waln’t good for you. It decayed the teeth; it took "way the appetite. A raid on the brown sugar bowl might result in an invitation to wait until father came home and then “certain the consequences of mis- khan ior. Catastrophes in the pan- try, invulvimr jam and treacherous chairs, ounstituted the tragedy of childhood. Of a winter night when there was a clean white spread of snow caution might be relaxed and A tally pulling had. Waiting for Iuid-well, mum. ye: weren’t rcpmmfndcd very highly to me, tl hick She Kneadnl. h Eren Break. nearer grand she the get “I kept my head when I fell into the water," oblon'od the young man. "Bow brunch," replied the auntie maid; "it must have blood you In nicely to Boat." Old enmities and friendships are! now forgotten, and Ttals, which des tests both Austria and Germany. is! united with them in the Triple -le Hume. while those oldatime ene- mies. England and Russia, are al- lied with France in the Triple', Emma. What will be the nextl switch! In 1377 Russia defeated the Turks decisively. but was cheated out of the rightful fruits of her victory by s combination of the other powers in the tangy of Berlin. In 1870 Prussia iMicted upon France the defeat, with accompany- ing loss of territory. that has been the cause of Europe's unrest ever since. In 1866 Prussia. gave its present ally, Austria, 3 fearful boning at Sandown and forced it out of first place in the Germic confedera- tton. Political Kxigeneies [lave Caused Many Changes in Europe. In the history of Europe during the past century nothing is more curious than the easy way in which national alliances have been made, broken, made again and changed as dynastic. economic and racial rea- sons have demanded. Here are a few of these political .transformu- tions: In 18l5 Russia. Prussia, England and Austria combined against France and crushed the paws; of Napoleon for ever, 5 In 1849, when revolution in, Hun- gary threatened the house of..%rps- burg in Austria. Russia intervened and by force of arms plfed the present Emperor Francis Joseph firmly upon his throne. ", In 1855-6 England. Frtince. Aus- tria and Italy allied themselves with the Turks against Russia in the Crimean war. . In 1859 France defeated Austria m Italy. and saw a great impetus to the unification of Italy. i When people who have previously (neglected exercise start to take it ithey are often met with one dif- 'ficulty. They complain that after ithey have walked for a mile or so they are too tired to go any farther, and when they return home they do not feel refreshed, but rather the opposite. Under these circum- atanc we need not hesitate to as- sure them that if they will but per- severe this feeling of fatigue will pass off, and a sense of enjoyment and lightness takes its place, says Dr. C. D. Musgrove in "Nervous Breakdowns.†Once they have ex- perienced the truth of this they are ready to continue the daily walk and exercises. and soon begin to wonder how they ever managed to live without them. This acute fatigue is due to the stirring up of the waste matter in the system. H, however, they force themselves to keep on walking quietly the exercise itself will help to eliminate these undesirable elements, and so fulfil its most important function. Apart from its feeding, the maras- mic child needs the greatest care. Owing to his extreme emaciation, bedsnrea often form; consequently, the baby’s position should be chang- ed frequently, and he should be kept perfectly clean. The child must be kept warm, but he also needs a great deal of fresh air both day and night, and it is a good plan to keep him in the open air all the time, and let him sleep on a balcony if possible. Be careful to avoid chilling the little body, however. If the air is at all cold, keep hot- water bottles-in the crib, and wrap the baby's hands up very warmly. After the daily hath, it is helpful to rub warmed olive oil gently into the skin all over the body.-Youbh's Companion. Harm-s. Marasmus is a wasting diseue that occurs in babies, madly in their first year. Without any dis- coverable cause, a child with intmue mus not only fails to gain, but be- gins to lose weight slowly but stead- ily. At the sme time, the bones continue to grow, and the teeth come at the usual time. The poor child takes on a distressing appear- ance; he becomes almost a living skeleton, although sometimes, the abdomen is distended. The child is always hungry be, cause it is starving. It cannot as- sililate any food, and is as hungry a few minutes after eating as it was More. It cries most of the time, with a fretful, whining cry. Some- times a very small baby will sleep incessantly instead of crying. That is on the whole unfortunate, for a crying child is likely to get treat- ment more promptly. _ - Although mnrusmus is met with occasionally in well-to-do families, it usually attacks artWriallrded in- fents in charitable imstitutiona, and it is very rare among breast-fed children anywhere. Each case of marasmus must be carefully stud- ied, for treatment that cures one child quickly, often has no effect on another. Many cases respond to a breast-milk diet. Some begin to recover when alkalies are added to the diet. In any event, the parents should seek the best of medical ad- vice, for it is sometimes necessary to make several experiments before the proper treatment is found. ht,1,ih.NCF,N OF' l Cr,?iTURY. The Beginning ot Exercise. ONTARIO -ART3Ft TORONTO 21. Render therefore unto Cae- sar the things that are Caesar's; and unto God the things that are God's --The important point in Christ's answer is that Jesus, in common with all the prophets, held that "national independence is not an ultimate good, nor the patriotism that fights for it an ultimate vir- tue." To him the kingdom of God did not mean the restoration of the kingdom of Israel. His kingdom was not of this world in the sense in which the Jews thought of worldly kingdoms, and he implied in his answer that it is possible to be a true and loyal citizen of the king- dom of God and yet submit to the rule of a foreign potentate. We be, lieve it a. natural deduction from this teaching that church and state are separate institutions, each with its peculiar claims and powers. But the Christian owes to his country not only “tribute money." but par- ticipatibn in every movement look- ing toward the betterment of soci- ety in that country. i 17. Is it lawful to give tribute un- to Caesar, or notr-This question shows the astuteness of those who sought to entrap Jesus. In their company,Phadisees, Herodians, and Sadducees, usually at enmity with each other, had now combined against Jesus. The party of zealots held that Israel, being a theocracy, with God ais'the. only king, should not pay tribute to any foreign power, and with these the Phari- sees agreed. Had Jesus, however, placed himself on record as sup- porting this policy, the Pharisees would have charged him with trea- son and had him condemned to death. As the Herodians support- ed the Roman government openly, they would not have asked such a question in sincerity. 18. Jesus perceived their wicked- ness-These men who came to ques- tion Jesus had not comprehended his character. They thought he would be tuttered by the compli- ments they paid him, and that in his answer he would foolishly give himself away. But Jesus saw their motive, and did not hesitate to pub- licly denounce them as hypocrites. 19. The tribute money-The Ro- man coin in which the tribute or tax was paid. This would probably correspond to our poll tax. Denariusr--A coin worth about seventeen cents, and we learn from the following verses that this one bore the image and superscription of Caesar. The Plusri---Throughoue his Gospel Matthew regards the Phari- seen as the most bitter of Christ's enemies, Lessorlx. A Day of 1ttatrstiomc-- Matt. 22. 15-22. Golden Text, Matt. SS. 21. Cutest not for any one-Referring to the boldness of Jesus, who had not been deterred from rebuking sin and unrighteousness, even though his strongest augments were against the Pharisees, who were of the social aristocracy of the Jews. Tksok counsel how they might en- snare him in his talk-The Jewish leaders .were " incensed at Jesus that they counseled together in or- der to devise some means for accus- ing him of treason before the Ro- man governor. They knew it was necessary to do this, since he alone had the right to impose the sen- tence of death. 16. Send to him their discipleer-- Or, agents, with the Herodians, partisans of the Herods, who tsup- peted_the Roman government. Teacher, we know that thou art true, and teachest, the way of God in truth-Words of fawning hypo- crisy. _ Wllllllllt mum tfllllllll Verse 15. Then-After having bend the pointed parables which Jesus had spoken against them. Lost! Rot, been appotru, tho Canadian 22 INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUG l' ST 80. They marveiled, and left him "BOBS" TO HEAD DOMINION TROOPS "Ha'. aged 82, who ttttered tsta" "rvitei." ,rl 1'oionel-lrt-Chiet or the oversea. i contingent at 15,000 men. Appomn'é 66uoret. Short and tair, he stands particu- larly high in the confidence of his sovereign. who has the very highest opinion of his ability. Indeed on the several occasions when he resigned his position as chief of the general staff in consequence of his differences with the late Archduke Francis Fer- dinand, with whom he was'continualiy at variance, the old Emperor insisted upon his remaining " his post, would not hear of his going and upheld bin agslnst his nephew. Harry, a bright youngster, was told by his mother that she would give him five cents for a dozen pins rescued from the floors, thus pre- venting her year-old babe. who was just beginning to creep, from find- ing them. "What will you do with the money when you earn it, Harry I" he was asktAby a neighbor. “With the first five cents,†said Harry promptly, "I will buy a pa- per of pins and scatter them all over the house." Gen. Julius topium, the present Chief of the General Stan M the Ger- man army, eiattoratintrphuis tor the present Joint action of the German and Austrian armies against Russia and France. Gen. Conrad von Hotzendortt, as chief ot the general staff of the Aus- trian army, is likewise a very prom- inent figure in the great war in Eur. ope. A wonderful organizer, a sol. dier of the Field Marshal von Moltke and Kitchener type, insisting that everything in connection with the Austrian army ghall work with clock- like precision and that nothing shall be left to chance, it is to him that has been eonfided by Emperor Francis Joseph the task of preparing for the present conflict. Indeed he spent sev- eral weeks in April last very quietly are. spiel} resort near Carlsbad with Moreover, he is a grandson of that Archduke Charles, one of the heroes of the Napoleonic wars at the be- ginning of the nineteenth century and famous as the victor of the battle of Aspern. Archduke Frederick is one ot the only members of the im. perial family whom the _murdered heir presumptive. Francis Ferdinand, did not dare to eliminate from the army, aware ot the reputation which he enjoyed as one of the most cap- able of Austrian commanders. Yet the two men were barely on speaking terms with one. another. since the late Archduke Francis Ferdinand could not forget that his morganatic wife, the Duchess of Hohenberg, had been summarily dismissed from the household of Archduchess Frederick on its being discovered that she had induced the ill fated heir presump- tive to jilt for her sake the daughter of her employers. Two other Archdukes who are called upon to play a role in the. present war are Archduke Leopold Salvator, who as inspector-General of Artillery has done much to place this branch of the service on an excellent footing, and Archduke Eugene, Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, who is in chief command of the Landwehr of both Austria and Hungary. The war has served to allay for the nonce all the animosities of the Hungarians toward the Austrians and to unite them together against Russia. For there is no nation in the world for which the Magyars enter- tain such a bitter hatred as the Russ sian, since they can never forget the devastation which they suffered at the hands of the Russian Marshal Paskie- witch, who at the head of a Museo- Vite force put all Hungary to the tire and sword when he invaded the an- cient kingdom of St. Stephen in 1849 to assist Austria suppressing the Mag. yar revolt. and went orai--geouts', foes wen astonished that ho could so easily avoid the trap that they had not for Archduke Fredorlck and Von Hebert- dorf. T ' It is to Archduke Frederick that Emperor Francis Joseph has eontided the chief command ot his station in the present, war. Very short end stocky, he is the eldest brother of the Queen Mother of Spain, and is on terms ot the utmost intimacy with the Kaiser, and as such a frequent via, itor to Potsdam, where one of his daughters is married to a Prussian otMer, Prince Emmanuel Salm. Enor- mously rich, he inherited the vast fortune as well as the Duchy of Tea- chen trom his uncle, Archduke Albert, victor of the battle of Custozza, and who for so many years was General- issimo ot the Austrian army. is sen'lqesiin any capacity. and in oversea.- (ox-co. which will lncludn AUSTRIAN ARMY LEADERS. m-éi-usr} High Finanee. gum-an ct which he was governor fur three years. Then he became commandm- of the' Second Army Corps with headquarters at Amiem, and just before hi. appointment as GeneraliSSimo of the my was Di.. rrttftr-G'enerou of Military Mm tioC F rtvearP,t) ,_ "Here.eomee Neriau. Let's all kiss her' complexion off.. Who’ll kiss her first t" “I will," volunteered Vanna. T "No, let me do it," urged Paar. ta. __“1 know where' her freckle- Although the cleverest mathema, tician in the army olnd a. scientific soldier in the best sense of the word, Gen. Joffre is the most de- termined supporter of the policy of attack in Mar. The only tactics that he has any use for are those of the offensive, and it is these that are best suited in his opinion for troops of the temperament of the French soldier of to-day. Hailing from the Pyrenees, a graduate (f the Ecole Polytech- nique at Paris. from which all the engineer and artillery ofhcetn, of the French army obtained the rudi- ments of the scisttihe branches of their profession, he at the age of 18 comma ndec a battery of artillery throughout the siege of Paris, and m the rt1toraticn of peace was ap- pointed to a first, lieut-mancy in. the engineer corps. He took part ia the Forms"; and To-nkin campaigns, and later was engaged in West V rica, directing the construction of railroads there, heading the relief column which went to the assistance of the Bonnier expedition, and ftnslly penetrating as far as Tim- buctco, and seizing that mystcri- on; city. which for oeaturiea had been the' headquarters of the no.- tive trade of Central Africa. 'He likewise had a, large shrubs in the ccnqucuto} the Island at Madge years of command in time of peace the opportunity of forming a ourrect estimate of the otheers and men upon whom he now has to de- pend for the execution of his care- fully matured plans against the enemy, and if they are eathutGrtie about, him, he is equally enthusias- tie about them. Like io many great military lead- are; Gen. Jolrro is; very silent mm, rather retiring in his demeanor, yet of the kindeet, quietest, moot un- "tcted, and easy-going manners, which do not at first convey the Im- ‘presaion of his rigid will and steel- liiye determination that constitute his chief characteristics. Burly in figure, with heavy Gareet mous- tache plentifully tinged with silver, thickly tufted eyebrows, shading a pair of very clear blue eyes that often twinkle with merriment, are usually genial and but seldom hard, he suggests when in civilian clothes one of those courtly country gentle- men that are to be found in rural France. Yet he can be very grim, and there are some who regard him as harsh, notably those olfieprs of high rank, comprising a. dozen oolo- nels and no lees than five generals, who last year at the close of the annual manoeuvree were by one sweeping and sudden stroke of disci- pline relieved by him of their com- mends and placed on the retired list for inetheieney, Unbounded Coettidenee. During the three years that he has been in the supreme command of the army the latter has had time totake his measure. with the result that it has accorded to him its un- bounded con6dencc and believes in him as a leader who can be trusted to lead it to victory. He is liked and respected by the officers, and above all by the rank and file, the soldiers describing him as the finest of “chiens de gardc (watch dogs), calm, but always ready to bite. He, in his turn has had during these: The trmseraslitmUct of the French any has considerably over 3,000,- 000 aioers and men under his com- mand, obedient to his slightest word. Gen. Jolfre is the youngest oifieer of his rank in the French ser- vice. Silent Ila-[mu], Quiet, and Unload. GENERAL "WE'RE. The Bear Glrls. (h-Iwral Jutlro. of the French v . -"i"'" “W'B‘v ““7 gut defender of democracy. is said to have split the Cabinet by his oppogition to wax, and the min- jen Irt. Ptltt. a!!! others have above 7 In I - -_- - - a an“ e nrged‘tho calling of u convention of the hbonu of Europe. to [one Beneath it all is heard the mut- terings of popular intereet and pro- test. except in Bunnie, which is still semi-barbaric and eager for war. There, democracy has mule smell headway, and those who have ngi. bated in its Uvor have been hunted out and sent to Siberie. In Italy the working elute- brought such pressure to bear on her rulers that they proclaimed her neutulity, and even in Germany thousand. of men and women per- tt.itf the â€straw thawing “Down -- -___ "ya-v» yu- aded the streets dumbing "Down with wnr.†In France, a, like protest bu Bone up, and the "rntirmrtionau," the 50:13.0! Ithoru brotherhood. Thus three men,-lmperor, Czar and Kaiser,--have kindled a fire under the fabric of civilization that in a. short time will consume what generations of men cannot restore. The men who are msrch- ins to-day under their respective banners, and who are paying the last drop of patriotic blood for the upkeep of useless dynasties. had no voice in the issue. They heard their country's call to arms and nobly responded; but the die was cart by the' jewelled hands of ral- ers who are far from the dsngers of the neat ntrumslp um! 41.. mung IcBPUHUVU; out, the die was cast by the' jewelled hands of rul- ers who are far from the dangers of the great struggle, and the peaceful citizens lay down the tools of their employment and took up the weapons of war against their brothers/ Into this whirlpool of bellum lethale have been drawn the little nations, to whom peace is the only desideratum, but whose territory unfortunately lies in the pathway of the mighty contending armies; but as seemingly intent that none shall escape" the general devasta- tion, neutrality treaties count as nothing to thwart the ambitions of the maddened rulers who have plunged Europe into this unholy war. Two other rulers, fearing the stability of their thronee, Uve joined issue. and have dragged in- to the seething strife Europe's only great republic, who, though dessir, ing peace. find, war forced upon her and her territory actually in- vaded by menacing hordes. And in England, when demo» cracy has made of monarchy but a. symbol, calmest of all the great powers. striving to the very last to avert the threatened cataclysm. has been forced into the maelstrom and has joined her allies to swell the crimson stream to a devastating Mod. A frenzied fanatic slew a prince- ling and his consort, and the old man thought he could see behind the wanton act a, plot against his dynasty; bitterness fUled his soul. Around him lay Europe, another name for a vast magazine of explo- sives awaiting only the spark to release its disrupting and destroy- ing forces, yet this old man, with trembling hand, flung the lighted torch into its midst, and tic-day the roar of cannon, the scream of shell, and the rattle of rifles, tell the sad story of the old man's inane deed. The crimson stream, already broad- ening into a river, is staining the soil of every old world country, and civilization is pushed back to- wards mediaeval darkness. Perched upon a throne as Emper- or, sitr the old man of Austria, whose few remaining years are numbered, yet he has a lively in- “rest in Earth's affairs, and, fear- ing that his passing might be fol- lowed by o, division of his empire, he determined to act quickly. Condemned try Pontius Pilate, led in ignomy through the streets of Jerusalem, and at last nailed to the cross-and never through it all, apparently. had He been able to overcome His enemies. What won- der that the mob was startled and at last. became mad with derision and scorn! Surely this man was a charlatan who had befooled them IS THE END OF ALL MONARCII- IRS AT HAND.' see and the dead to rise up out of the grave. Everywhere men were talking of His divine power and hailing Him I: the Munich, it not the Most High himself. And now, behold! when Bis own time of dis- tress was come m seenied to be as helpless as a lamb led to the slaugh- ter. He had been seized by the sol- diers of Rome, tried by the Sunbe- drin, sharp and stinging.' Here was the man who had made Himself famous through all Israel by the diseases which He had healed, the sine which Be had forgiven, the wonders of every kind which He had performed. There was nothing which Be could not do, from stilling a. tempest on the water to making the blind to, The Spirit of Here is the very cry which wt: caught up by the mo'b surging about the foot of the cross after the erueifixion and hurled " the dying Nazarene in hatred and derision. How eagerly the excited crowd must have seized upon this taunt, and with what unction th hy mun have shouted it in chorus! Its applica- tion was so obvious-ite point so sharp and stinging! Here was the - . ' 7" ,I! l-__,_._. GOSPEL 0F sE1f-fihctlriiji Be saved others: himself he can- not "ve.-itthew xxvii., 42. huh --e-_- - CT'"".'"::""." . 41.- 32:31:3W.“ Paris, the Christ Has Travelled Far Penetrated Deep ‘. the force Bermuda genenlly is cailtul the land of the lily and the rnw FV Thr British soldier. who hen“ tir. Inn nicknamed it "the land "f 'qtuds' and onions.†as the cull-Au don of thee, vegetables b,rm the chief indumry of the irtltaltitattt,s A1thoutrh the climate is tlup'va'. there in not a single wild aniw.a! in Berautd-ot, even a small gm» “Ft Neither are there an) trateta, tum-can. or muturcaml Not even motor-bicycles are allow- ed. The only means of transit is the o.td-Nahiirased "grvwler." N'o “PM would take his ship into Bermuda without a perfect know “I! ot the Surrounding waters. as the Inland. an surrounded by an aimott impugn-Me natural brrt, u- in the form of great coral. ttb.. Ship Win; the land mit in . tic-n. course between "? his MD of buoys. which (and. than eddy into Urbor. The wicked. witty" prodigal re- turned and in his old manner tMt- oostad his has": A. "Well, pavilion I've come bu AM you going to kill the fan a!" ' “Don't you feel better since )ou are up smoking?" Mb. I'm both-rod to death trying to frnd on} what has been. of all that money I Ill out; to an." or England. we have to cvntvm plate, but the destiny of European eivilimtion. which will now luv (It cidod by the force of arms. Bet the old gentleman was a much tor him and said: . "Nd, my 0021:! thing im let you the." Can America watch the bllUL'L"* ttrt.ttoeadt It is itrtpottrible. As (BI-001*“ 3 mm. and our "- the achievements of a CPD- tiny, our aympathy is qulvlu-hwl. and we must feel in time the, wrrl ble strain of Europe's loss. w,, ale brothers, and war mum was.» Han has trirt the world around \\ all enblea---with Meant he has cm (l5 tanee to . fraction.--he has madv the atmosphere the bearer M in me-tres,-) abort he has lratrr naliaed the human race. and 1M: trntrieidal war will go down in hik tory " the most unjust and ines enable of all wars known G, man CHAS. M. "ICF. Denver, Colo., Aug. IO, 1.914, J In the enormous issues at stake It " not merely France and [hum What all Europe is fighting “hunt is not worth the l ', of a u.ustle, soldier already killed; In. “run has been oommitted against any union that the war can allesnte, and, no tar as known, only Elm'und. and Belgium. whose Lemma) has been invaded, have the shuinest came tor war. Even th. l,-. M the Archduke of Austria and his consort did not call for thr. an} tue of the lives of the thousaml- os' his own people. Thus the Mtl?' a» wince the upect of fratrmui in r rot. It thrusts its brutal fist inte, je face of tcivilization from “bu-h 1he tspirit of modern culture and 'f working elm fraternity “an faut smoothing the lines of haw. and back of the list are the ja’a'vu-nw of thrones none too mare. upon the governments the}: [mm-s1 and condemnation of this â€NV and aniustifintrle warn Tlm Null ably will accomplish but mm at thier late (ilk, but their nrituLerr.. and the intensity of their pr-tssl, is full of meaning to the aulwl‘ats who have been instrumental :1. de. luging Europe in innocent laud When the great struggle is ewurietl. and these monarchs witlldrau Weir armies and count the cost. Its, mar» chy in Europe of the “11114.va kind will face its day of [migr- meat. “He saved others; himwif not save." This was tire taunt ct the dark hour of death. But through all tl,, which have been glorified h, spirit it Ins become the [mi bute.u-aev. John Haynes H "Pee ttthem' Salim." The fireman who dies mulching others from the Barnes, the soldier who parishes in duty which "m the “my, the physician wh,, suc- cumb! to the p1ngue from which be h. and unnumbered victim, the prophet who is slain for the truth which enve- humanity- these, m not the â€If-centred Wight who sun his own akin at any hazard, we re. cognize es the supreme exomplm of the race. And we hail Jmis u supreme among men hecuuw no punched this gospel of w‘if ~m-ri. tiee u it has never been plum-bed before or since in human nimn. and, better still, practised â€in an}. pel to the bitter end 1sithou: ll‘nvn. ins; - - att. "no caved others; himself“ *6 an.†It muobvious taunt. 15mm .vhet nth! irony has this m. N aeod to-day upon those “ho tai' it u the Int intuit to the tortarsi Neuter-e! Now we know tlm there ii munching higher and nob. let in the world than the “Mum of self-preservation and tite am; bitione of self-interest. h1s we understand that the true man a one who thinks not of himwif but d others, and gladly dies " isrwd be that others may live. N, " M hee that the essence of lib. is um. and that the essence of low 1. “we. A Land of the Lily. The Prodigal (all. _ we exempl." " Jesus II because a. of self-surf. en prom nun his , Jed misty. ithout tiimA. rvun one. ch he I, the UM HG I! tet " EOUSE BE(il Canadian Mic. Aug. my Wha (culled II the "War Pa - oreetd this afterm- W lighting: the Duk “MI. The opening m-n dive-ated of all the sung! which have charrtm med “I, Ind in theur My“ dbl": evidence of a lbw. tioo ot the grave issuts tbe Parliament of Ctitnuo coiled upon to (ink . . _. Iss.' Inughtoo Parhunvm I _ by thousaod, of ple, Who - nut I announcing skies fr that will go down m - in the 1mm]: of _ Parliament. His up} In accompanied by , oort ot awn. and the CWmM'y guard , the 9overoor licr Guards “Honor able Con-0n: '. “Very gave on in; t.be. invert-us , aGiisiasiotw haves cmrocuion. Th Rik ot Wit nu impentivr for m ekirnordinary m: teaoe of the hull our Empire. "With respect measures " ma; tion and awn-w the necessary I: will be nubmmu ation. other b ditional mmhun tial tor the pul be presented u, "Gentlemen lf mum fort you In which has by the ourl “lion. u" In gesatletw'n (f -,---The l which we ha tanned to th and ontlty wl ated the Cana “From PVel response l been all tl qririt whi. inspires I ions thron my be a' to repel tl Tail to st hind but!“ in the For the bit-aw ty the K ing unu and gem' played rl brtadth I " of "that that it 000 be wards may i, author oil du 3t, 191 ity of arrival g " " mal Atty LI lr tirereht F - emu bank mlkt sue l the f “on: ll et ll' lhle (Run: Gentlemen D “l7 Periiaatw thousand were In fro ff still Parliament Will the loci-,1 " tutorized In their Mead l of . deep £1 we issues wit ;of Canada h deal. d the Univ liq-rm Rill , land! of Otta , not deter skies bon iown ttti . -“l- a" the t mad ntlvn M ml Thror" (In at " H 'en N