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Durham Review (1897), 3 Sep 1914, p. 2

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.‘j}’ ada of th 1n&Z . an .. Eng ted n# mof the or mt te af D It i x &# factory, with per| 5 ons or _two go wokei fhe tote use of ice for household purposts, and even in conmection with the very extensive dairy industry, is rewilered almost unnecessary by the low temperatures which prevail The entire ice supply of the south and west of Ireland is manufacturâ€" ed by a single establishment in Cork, and amounts to only six tons per day. Thore are two breweries, a chilledâ€"meat concern and a butter Yes, Cordelia, the drum major beâ€" longs to the bandâ€"cven if he does give one the impresion the band belongs to him. Only a woman can entertain unâ€" welcome visitors and make them hz';eloomo. ra man has turned down two or three opportunities .hey begin to dodge him. Some people never have any roâ€" spect for grey hairs until they have acquired a few of their own. ity Success is the one sin some people refuso to forgive in their friends. A man isn‘t necessarily attached to a baby carriage because he folâ€" lows it. €Ianco,. Of, SUE DECLET, FOpe of Rome,"" runs the old couplet, "I would have no fighting men abroad nor weeping maids at home." War lays its heaviest burden of sorrow and suffering on the shoulders of women. There is some justice in their demand to have their say in the settling of affairs between nations. The truch is that war is man‘s work and not woman‘s. ‘ The preâ€" sent conflict is one of races not of sovereigns. The eager rallying of reservists of all nations to their reâ€" l spective colors indicates this ~lainâ€" ly. The king who kept aloof from a struggle in which the integrity and independence of his country were at stake would have to step down from his throne. *‘‘Were I the Queen of France. or, still better. Pope ofl ed It is a common belief among woâ€" men, and one frequently expressed, that the present war is due to the personal ambitions of two or three seem to be fighting against the emâ€" pire of the subjugating type, with its "ruling‘ and its "subject‘ races. Dowbtless the outcome will be to leave some ‘""ruling‘‘ races more mo«dest and to give some now ‘"subject‘‘ races greater freedom to work out their own destiny. Bo it looks as if the smaller naâ€" tions of Europe would gain by the conflict. The stars in their courses iwm. Even in Russia czarâ€"worship is now rather a convention than a conviction. Intel! In certain quarters there is a great effort to put all the rest of us in fear that the defeat or even the checking of Germany in this war means that Russian absolutism will master Europe and even the world. There seem®Mno danger of any such outcome to coolâ€"headed observers, long enough in the new world to be free from ancient European preâ€" judices. In the first place, the Gerâ€" man people will still exist, no matâ€" ter what the fate of the German government or the German dynasâ€" ties. And one way or another the German people have always managâ€" ed to throw off any alien yoke. Moreover, the smaller Slavic states are by no means in love with czarâ€" to the British Empire. The judgâ€" ment is of especial value because it is not that of an "imperialist‘‘ Engâ€" lishman but of a "nationalist‘ Irishman. Mr. O‘Connor further declares that ‘"this war is one for the defense of the principle of naâ€" tionality of small states," and is, on Britain‘s part, a "great crusade to save democratic liberty.‘" These also are points on which the opinion o# an Irishman of Mr. O‘Connor‘s record is of value. His life has been devoted to the advancement of exâ€" actly these principles. NOTES AND COMMENT S the best known of the journalistic spokesman of Irish nationalist asâ€" pirations, declares that the Euroâ€" pean war has at once secured home rule for Ireland and welded Treland Don‘t Need Jee in POINTED PARAGRAPHS. T. P. O‘Connor, for -iny 7xe‘n' igence is the mother of brev 16 inother Ireland. |.. ‘"When the automat‘s opponent jmoves the black king the automat | begins by examining if the moveâ€" ment conforms with the rules of the game. If not, it protests by lightâ€" ing a lamp. If the move is accordâ€" ing to the rules the automat, takâ€" | ing into account the position of the |three pieces, decides what is the | best move and then makes K,_ Thus ]'t-he game coptinues unti{)lt e autoâ€" m ted the black king. t a o. S ,sh?uJ e a mistake, as I sa.xd] before, ‘the automat protests by l lighting a hamp. Bfl, it will tole ! ate only three mistakes. Then ;h its lights go out and you may movre your pieces as much as yoh wantâ€" the n.un:nh- finished. If youl wish to a new game you inâ€"; _ "It is true that the game which | the automat plays is not very comâ€"| plicated, but, nevertheless, for its [opponent to win he must know how to play. The automat uses the' white king against the castle and the black king. It‘s game is won | in advance, but it must follow a. [Mttain course which leads it up to "the finish. | The latest product of this wonâ€" derful laboratory is a machine which plays chess and which seems actvally to accomplish the work of & human brain. Senor Torres thus describes his own invention :â€" Wonderful _ Product _ of _ Spanish Scientist‘s Laboratory. Is the day near at hand when science will be able to create a huâ€" man being? This question may well be asked when one considers the latest invention of that king of automatic inventors, Senor Torres y Quevedo, member of the Spanish Academy of Sciequges. Senor Torâ€" res caused a se ion some thirty years ago by ‘invénting a machine which would solvg algebraic equaâ€" tions. Then he invented a balloon which would da'§t itself and could attain a speed great as the fastâ€" est Zeppelins. / â€" MACHINE THAT PLAYS CHESS. While prevention is the best curse, there is every‘> reason to believe that the majority of people who sufâ€" fer from digestive»disorders would derive great benefit by taking plenty of time to ‘"fletcherize‘‘ their food, that is, to chew it thoroughly before swallowing. Thorough masâ€" tication is also essential for the preâ€" servation of the teeth, for neglect to use these organs encourages da2â€" cay and brings about their early Hurried and rapid eating, which toâ€"day is too common among all classes of society, prevents anything like efficient mastication, and as a result the food has a very poor start in the digestive process before reaching the stomach, says Dr. A. B. Oslen, in Good Health. It is alâ€" ways wise to take less food if need be and then masticate it thoroughly rather than hurry rapidly through a big meal. There is no doubt but that "boiting‘‘ the food is one of the most prolific causes af indigestion, dyspepsia, constipation, _ torpid liver, headache, and‘many other liver, headache, and‘ many other symptoms and disturbances ‘that might be mentioned. The extreme type of shock that is seen after painful accidents or surgical operations has its merciful side, for it deadens the sensibilities, and ‘withdraws the mind from the suffering of the body. Sometimes there is complete unconsciousness, and soon if consciousness persists, the patient is quite indifferent to everything. That . enables those who can thelp to move the sufferer and begin proper treatment. After a time that varies with the severity of the shock, the treatment is folâ€" lowed by a reaction. The stupor wears off, the patient grows restâ€" less, his pulse gets stronger and slower, color comes back to his face ard lips and his eyes begin to look more natural. That means that the vital force, which was beatâ€" en back by the sheck, is asserting itself again. The remedies that the physician uses are those which will ' restore the blood to its normal flow and stimulate the vital functions. For shock associated with great loss of blood, the best thing is to inâ€" ject salt solution. For shock withâ€" out hemorrhage, a stimulant of some kind is generally given.â€" Youth‘s Companion. | Shock may also be the result of an overpowering emotion, like great terror. That kind of shock is often seen in the survivors of any terrible accident. Many who have not got so much as a scratch suffer for a long time from a state of impaired health; sometimes their nervous systems are «o badly shattered that they never entirely recover. That is one of the many reasons why foolâ€" ish practical jokes are wrong. It is not funny to dress up like a ghost, to jump out on timid children from behind doors,.to play "jokes"" with dead mice orâ€" snakes. And such pleasantries are dangerous as well as stupid. Many an unfortunate child has been made the slave of fear all his life by reason of a shock that some playmate gave him in his youth. | Fal Shock. In. medical language, ""shock" means the depression of the vital forees, both mental and physical. The condition may result from many causes, and may vary from a faintâ€" ness and pallor that soon disappear to a state so desperate that the sulâ€" ferer dies of it, as in the case of serious accident, or difficult surgiâ€" cal operations. Hurried Eating Is Bad. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ‘‘Yaas," responded the duke, "I adore you, you know, and ali that sort of siliy rot." & UE k CP2e |" ow ns .1 .+ idb ototiths, h. itc t â€" hss : h e» >u'é. P Ses "Con P a " . Despatches from Paris a few days $ \b;?d"pf a ?;markable geries of posters spotting the country of France. These pobters, innocently advertising Bouillon Kub, a German ® s6hp préparation, were cleverly. printed by the Germap congern adve!fii-u"ng Iha soup that they acted as signals to German a officers, leading their foroes-%fll:ougfie%r;noe. e% ‘‘spy posters" is seem posted"on the lef the building past which the French sg!g,ig‘;‘i"'“ marching en route to meet the Germans near the Al frgntier. The imgenuity ‘of thessigns & s‘nm‘m., 'lgg_u a square yellow asom would carry Infotmation, **Food in ghundance found here;‘! while a round red, sign would advertise, "This groun mined." Maxry geometrcal figires and most bf the colors were M‘M‘MM flow and even the American Stars and Stripes were ‘employed to convey their messages of information. Miniscr of the Interior got wind of the system and orders were tpleflgbed throughout France to stroy thase posters. Bouillon Kub, therefore, i# no lGonrzer aAvartiead fronudSand ‘"Percival,‘"‘ murmured the heirâ€" ess, "‘do you really love your little wifie ?" A glow of grey in yonder meadow, Dandelions‘ ghosts, Sway in stately dance together, Frail and dying hosts. Along the road winding dimly The sheepâ€"a drowsy whiteâ€" Wander slowly to their shelter, Tinkling swoet ‘"Goodâ€"night. And from the dark blue shadows, A rooster crows shrill ; And soon the niorning, fresh and sweet, Will come 0‘er eastern hill. Far off in purple distance A robin cheeps "Goodâ€"night And slowly from the western set Fades the greying light. Evening shades descending lower Tint the clouds a darker gloom And the ghostly shadows flutter Slowly to my room. ‘‘The general adoption of automaâ€" tic _ processes the substitution, which is increasing every day, of machines for manual} labor, constiâ€" tutes one of the essential forms of progress in modern industry. I beâ€" lieve that there is no limit in this domain, and that, theoretically at least, the time will come when all factory operations, even _ those which demand the intervention of engineers, can be excecuted autoâ€" matically." can be made as complicated as any one may wish, "It is not to be denied that autoâ€" mats can â€" have sensitive organs (monometers, thermometers, comâ€" passes, etc.) permitting them to recognizo the cireumstances which determine their movements, but science refuses to admit that they can possess the analogue of a brain. But I believe I have shown that the possibility theoretically does not offer the least doubt. Auvt,o.:néi; ‘"‘The old automats, the most celebrated of which were those of Vaucanson, imitated the appearâ€" ance and the movements of man. Toâ€"day this idea has been abanâ€" doned, and intricate â€" machines which look like nothing but maâ€" chines, have taken their places. Th celfâ€"directing torpedo is a good example of an automat. The difficulty does not lie in the work of its helmsman, but in the deter mination of the movement to be executed. _ The machine deducesl this movement from indicators by purely mechanical means. This, as in the calculating machines, is the brain work of the man that the maâ€" chine accomplishes. vite the autemat by a special moveâ€" ment to play ancther game. If it accepts it will turn out all its lights, place its pieces on the board in their original positions, then walt for you to make the first move. Wildly in Love,. TWILIGHT. INNOCENT PiCTiMS oF THE cREAT ARMED coNFLICT THE QUEEN OF BELGIUVM AND HER CHILDREN, NOW AT ANTWERP. â€"M.M. M French Soldiers Marching Past sun po us uy 00e ol Ceets > P e V . I CHOw S.or. ~would carry the "-u."f found here;‘!>while a round red: sign would agov‘erhse "This ground is :fi;;“: es and. most Df the colors were utilized,â€" andâ€" animal formsyâ€" flowers, Ance < Stripes were ‘employed to convey their messages of information. The |of the of the system and orders were telegraphed throughout France to deâ€" |a tem; , therefore, is mo longer adventheg in France. e" kingd« munessmeutiiheetienabincentineetinooiemsmmenmmememc mss cce ce Sympathy is like a kiss good for nothing till it is divided between two. A friend caps the story with anâ€" other of the prudent Scot, or raâ€" ther of the: prudent Scot‘s wife. They were at sea togetherâ€"in the literal senséâ€"and had just left the dinner table. There was sufficient roll to produce internal uneasiâ€" ness, and the husband was seen to be making progress to the side of the vessel; when his wife intervenâ€" ed. ‘"Remember, John,‘" she said, "you‘ve juss had your denner, and it‘s paid for." It was not lost. The sash must be of supple terial, drawn about the waist soft folds and tied in a how in back. The ends may be drawn to fall loosely over the back of skirt. * Women are perhaps wearing a bone or two more in wheir corsets, but there is no tighter lacing and the trend of the moment is to apâ€" pear more or less corsetless. Street frocks are made of sheer material ; heavy linens, piques and cotton fabrics no longer hold sway. Organdie, tulle and batiste have taken their places. In direct contrast to the allâ€"white costumes are the all black creations. They are fashioned of black broadâ€" cloth and trimmed with satin coverâ€" ed buttons. The tunic may be seen on one gown ; then it will be removed from all but the left side of a second and from the front of a third. One of the features of the season is a toucth of color in white dresses. Sometimes this touch is in the form of black velvet. The lacy blouse is so much the rage in Paris that it cannot be passâ€" ed without a mention. It is even worn with serge skirts. The prettiest of the new blouses are of lace and chiffon. They are loosely fitted and trimmed with lace or net. The thoroughly fashionable figure should be flounced from ankles to hips and buttoned straight up from hips to neck. Very deep blue with a lavender cast as well as navy blue and a new rich shade of peacock blue will be in favor. Later in the season wraps of velâ€" vet will supersede the wraps of thin material. Velvets will be a most fashionable material for evening as well as street wear. Paris is in the height of admiraâ€" tion for the combination of maline and lace. The new corsets must ‘be higher to meet the demands of the new basques. $ Every blouse must have its collar. The bow tie makes a suitable finâ€" ish for practically all tailored colâ€" lars. The Latest Wrinkles. Prudent Scot Germ CA Ds oC CERe C% route to meet the Germans near the Alsace i square yellow agozt,ar would ‘carry the red. sign would : vertise, "This ground is re u:;.lped,qadmu:w forms,â€" flowers, vev 1P > maetagaae CE 15 405 0 7 ®p, PH an ma the low the in Spy" Sign, ‘"‘Why are you so surprised to see mel Did not the maid tell you who it was that had called ?" _ _‘"Four boavers, united to *+ransâ€" port the largest section of the waâ€" ter. They pushed with forepaws, with breasts, and with hips. Plainâ€" ly it was too heavy for them. They paused. ‘Now they will go for help,‘ I said to myself, ‘and I shall find out who is the boss.‘ But, to my astonishment, one of them beâ€" gan to gnaw the piece in two and two more began to clear a narrow way to the water; the fourth set himself to cutting down another asnen.‘" ‘‘No, she only said man.‘ *‘ _ "I gave most attention to the harvesters who felled the aspens and moved them, bodily or in secâ€" tions, by land and water, to the harvest piles, One tree on the shore of the pond which they felled into the water, was eight inches in diameter and fifteen feet high. Without having even a limb cut off it was floated down to ths nearest harvest pile, Another, about the same size, which the beavers felled about fifty feet from the water, they cut into four sections and removed its branches; then a single beaver wou‘!d take a branch in his teeth, drag it to the water, and swim with it to the harvest pile. ‘‘They raced, dived, crowded in general mixâ€"ups, whacked the waâ€" ter with their tails, wrestled and dived again. _ ‘There were two or three play centres, but the play went on without intermission. "‘The work was at its height a little before midday. Nowadays it is rare for a beaver to work in dayâ€" ilght. Men and guns. have preâ€" vented «dlaylight workers from havâ€" ing descendants. . These beavers not only worked but played by day. One morning, for more than an hour, there was a general frolic, in which the entire population appearâ€" ed to take part. "Again and again I listened for the superintendent‘s voice; conâ€" stanty I watched to see the overâ€" seer among them ; but I listened and watched in vain. Yet I feel that some of the patriarchal fellows must have carried in their minds a genâ€" eral plan of the work, and that during its progress orders and diâ€" rections that I could not compreâ€" held were given. "At times upwards of forty of them were in sight. Although there was a general coâ€"operation, each one appeared to be doing his part without orders or direction. Again and again a group of workers comâ€" pleted a task, and without pause silently moved off and began anâ€" other. Everything appeared to go on mechanically. It produced a strange feeling to see so many workers doing so many kinds of work effectively and automatically. Are Enterprising and Do Many Cleâ€" ver Things. The work of the enterprising beaver has always had attractions for naturalists, and Emos A. Mills describes some of their habits in his volume, "In Beaver World." y BEAYVERS ARE BUSY WORKERS Surprise. country side A gentleâ€" left of they missing the epiritual ance of the Messiah and the 35. How say the scribes!â€"The scribes appealed to Scripture (Psa 110. 1). Bo did Jesus. But he asks, “B(i)w do the scribes interpret the Psalmist‘s . words?" Just as they had not seen the significance of the lgiritul..l in tbo_ Mosaic law, so were 7°C Nrst and great commandment. For such love is indissolubly linked to God, who himself is spirit. :« 34. Not far from the kingdomâ€" The scribe had perceived the truth of Jesug‘s words not ‘only with his mind, but with his heart. His perâ€" ception was spiritual and hence led him to the very frontier of the Kinfdom. Will power to put his spiritual insight into practice was aloné fhecessary to take him across the bqis::. NP PSE TN hnsdc 4 1 Lintdlid can be nothing material about love. It must be spiritual, And so to love God and one‘s neighbor to the limit of human possibility became the first and great commandment. For such lout Ju Anmiian LILEC 154. 4 33. More than all whole burnt ofâ€" ferings and sacrificesâ€"This means more than the whole Levitical rituâ€" al. This would have been mere exâ€" travagance of language had not the scribe been serious. He saw, perhaps as never before, that the significance of the law and ritual was in the spirit and not in the letâ€" ter. Love can be understood only from the spiritual, not from the maâ€" t,eria‘l. approach. In fact, there 81. Love try neighbor as thyseif â€"Belfâ€"love, although much practisâ€" ed, is a contradiction in itself. Love to God means looking entirely away from self. So also love to one‘s neighbor, Him to the last limit of human posâ€" sibility, that is, with all the hbeart and soul and mind and strength. Matthew says ‘heart, soul, mind." The original law said (Deut. 6. 5) ‘"heart, soul, strength." God. Sod;lt;"tvoao’d was one and indivisible. What commandment is the firs: of all!â€"There were six hundred and thirteen laws in the Mosaic code. To choose the * first among these was to the scribe a sufliciently hard task and, doubtless, led him to think he had outdone Jesus. 29. The Lord our God, the Lord is oneâ€"Jesus immediately puts himself in an incontrovertible poâ€" sition. The basis of she Jews‘ beâ€" lief was the oneness, the unity, of Lesson X. The Great Commandâ€" ‘ ments. Golden Text, Luke 10.27. Verse 28. And one of the scribes came . . . and knowing that he had answered . . . well, asked â€" The scribes were keen investigators. They loved the truth. But in their searching for the truth they were apt to emphasize the unessential. It is interesting to note the eagerness with which this scribe came. He was keyed up with alertness. He could not keep out of a mental afâ€" fray. And he would ask a question: which would test Jesus to the last extreme, a question, perhaps, which would confuse him beyond control. Such was the problem which perâ€" plexed the Psalmist until he "went into the sanctuary of God!"‘ Then a great light began to dawn upon his darkened mind, and he tells us that he "understood.‘"‘ For here, in the presence of these things which bore witness to him of the realty of the Unseen, he found himâ€" self reminded of the worthlessness of all the rewards that earth can THE SUNDAY SCHOAL LESSOX is jud%ed by righteousness! Or if God, for some mysterious purpose of His providence, is willing that the wicked should be "Always at Ease" and ‘‘increase in riches," _ why should men strive to do the good and avoid the evil In the face of the very apparent "prosperity of the wicked,‘"‘ may not the Psalmist be pardoned for asking if he has not ‘"in vain cleansed (his) heart and washed (his) ‘hands in innocency‘‘! The problem which the Psalmist sought "to know,‘"‘ and which he found to be "too painful‘"‘ for him, was none other than the ageâ€"old enigma of ‘‘the prosperity of the wicked." Here all about him were men whom he knew to be workers of iniquityâ€"men who were unjust, exâ€" tortioners, adulterers â€" men who should suffer greatly for their sins in any.woi‘d which was ruled by the low of equality. And yet, so_ far from being smitten by the rod of outraged justice, these offenders seemed to be among the most proâ€". sperous of men. ‘‘They are not in trouble as other men,‘"‘ says the Psalmist, ""neither are they plagued like other men.‘‘ On the contrary, ‘"‘their eyes stand out with fatness ; they have more than heart could wish.‘‘ Here surely is a discrepancy which calls for explanation. How can such things be in a world which "When I thought to know this, it was too painful for me, until I went into the sanctuary of God ; then unâ€" derstood I their end.‘"â€"Psalm Ixxiii, 16â€"17 How Can a God Permit Rewards to Com» to Who Flout His: Will ? INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPTEMBER 6. Love the Lord thy Godâ€"Love RIGHI UNDERSTANDIy epiritual significâ€"| there would be but few . h and the coming| _ * o y * He was not to be !â€" Lovers are :kud to be over a material | they rften make a pair liche- hVO vingu wee othmw;'.sc there would be but few high fiver® Bo irresistibly did Jesus carry this meaning that a tioning is silenced and the is closed with the statem the common people heard ) ly. The common people, th« ]thole who had no class int stake and hence were unpr: ‘the,v heard him gladly bec spoke with conviction and | their hearts. 88. Long robesâ€"Worn h. of _ rank â€" and distinctio: ; scribes frequently wore the | so long that the tassels tra 'on the ground. Hence they ed notice which in itself wa of _ salutation. They n would want the chief seats foremost places, because, men who take themselves : ously, they demanded a rec which inherently they < command. 41. And he . . . beheld â€"Wherever Jesus sat or stood he saw. His gaze was penetrating and discrn:mâ€" inating as well as all inclusive. Noâ€" thing escaped the sight of his +x** or the insight of his soul. + 40. Devour widows‘ houses,. and for a pretense, make long praye®® â€"Robbing widows and, to blind them to the fact, making lon« and seemingly fervent prayers. Catch ing widows‘ substance with the bait of prayer.‘‘ A deception excep: tionally damnmable. That _ Jesus stresses this fact indicates the Labâ€" itualness of the practice. _ Lovers are said to be blind 87. David . . . calleth him and whence is he his son !â€"1; likely that a father would allegiance to his son as lord was contrary to the Jewish i« honor and respect the «© were to pay to their parents or thy father and thy mo: When David. therefore, calle Messiah Lord he could now b ing of a descendant (who have to come in some futnure he was thinking of a being s ready in existence (one w)h« ally is). Hence the Messiah not be material and tempo= men ordinarily are; he m spiritual and eternal, as a > man might well be. Chris: be the Son of David, therei. ly as David was the spirito. sence of the eternal. And ; son he would be the incarna the eternal. The Christ, th: would be the Word becom: God in human form. force dominating and clean human spirit. . . . *‘meet with triumph and disa ter, And treat these two imposters ju y the same." â€"Rev, John Havynes Holme Buch is the understandinsy whic came to the Psaimist when he ‘went into the sanctuary of God." Rudâ€" yard Kipling summed up the eterp al lesson when he bade us have euch insight into the truth of hings that we may be able to weakness and power, fame an) ob scurity, ease and miser, these at bottom are of @s little concern As 5o many phantoms of the night X, one of them touches the issues ¢ life. No one of them is vital to reg welfare. To just the exten that we court them, to that extent ye stand deceived and mocked ""Love joy, peace, long suffering, kindnes goodness, faithfuiness, meekness, selfâ€"control‘‘â€"these are the thing that count. And these, we are tolf on excellent authority, are fi,’ fruit of the spirit." To "see God" is the one great reward, and thi is reserved not for the wicked, by for the "pure in heart.‘ give to selfish desire 1 ambition. What il the acquire ease and weal)t) What if their eyes do with fatness . . . and more than heart could q these things amount to Do they enrich the thoug the vision or dt‘e])f-u th ’of their possessors! 1. in the hours of sorrow an Can they even be prese, death has claimed its ow in short, do these thing. men as men? They ma, fine in the outer world 0| and proud display, bu: sanctuary of God," whe brought face to face wit finite and Ebernal, do th come as nothing, or less thing! ~ Wealth and Povert; W an« O i the and { w any mean ley .enh, 'fi% ty lvd! ;d ‘.h \ What Pé UK leb‘;z in th ONC is ru ck&l: n but en\ Apd ‘ae bes nder rds ne Jué hen k rd NO M to + Ww UNHH COMPL Will Not Be Broken A Self=â€"C A despatch fromâ€" Otiawa s The Canadian overseas contin will go into the field as one fig! unit. It will go as a solid Cana division, with its own line of ww‘flofl It will not be br into brigades on rl‘.'_!:'hwnu Eu h mud‘. "“fd (.w‘ Minister of Militia, is the request for a line eation unit, which it cided to send with The line of communica prise a total of 1,678 men, 86 nurses, 78 horso transports and 155 wag be made up as follows : One supply column 0 and men and 53 trucks One reserve party ol and men, 358 horses : One ammunition party cers and men and 113 transport. M gmer‘rlmspfm" Russians Sink A despatch from 1 The light cruiser Mad ashore during an enga fog on the Island of O« the Gulf of Finland thick weather other G ships in the vicinity w render assistance, and to foat the vessel havin captlin d?(.‘ld(’d to sacr A despatch f: The Wireless Te received the foll feial wireless d« Austrian â€" Emperor " ‘NVictory aft with you. He x I most sincerely dear friend, als your dear son, and the Prince as the incompa man army. . Wo what moves me anrmy in these < tory . â€"_â€"*Emperor Wi the following Emperor of Al‘ls "Field Marshal vyor who has been truste« peror with the admi that part of Belgium sion of Germany, ha gium to enter upon Governor General. _‘ ministration has bee! the President of the Board at Aixâ€"Ja«} von Bandt. He will the Chief Administra â€""The King of Bava the western theatre : "The former Con# N‘ier reports tha Died Bravely A despatch from | The Daily Mail‘s Co, respondent telegraphs lin newspapers are stories of how prom OoBhcers fell on the Prince Frederick of 1. he fell, grasping : standard, ‘"Bave th noblest families in Britons Saved A despatch from General Joseph Joftr« inâ€"chief of the Frenc! telegram to Field Ma French, commander â€" forces, says : ‘"‘The British arm: tate, but threw its against forces which merical superiority contributed in a mamner to securng &# the French arms lin dirigible ba Aur Raid 0 some anxiety regarding ifl B G'Il;flurvnfl:u k on | Dail y Telegraph diso eome m the advisability viding a suitable protoc M against . such : ‘m exists yhe distinot : dut by the Germans, espe the present meteorologics( E!:: !..” the ;‘pe;',- "‘tha Paids of a similar nature an< more extensive stale may be « A despatch from London re attack on Antwerp by a GERMAN sLOCOEs®d FRANCIS the h «1 d L T MASCT lHoon r8 n 11 ad

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