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Durham Review (1897), 8 Oct 1914, p. 2

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% 4 ¢ «* * t‘ p i# t 25+ Â¥o« th + Jokk <g € "‘. 9 Lk s /4 "F 2: PÂ¥ i. .\‘ + § : & 4E £4 3 But a | fe fls It is eaid that the truth will outâ€" and it seems to be always out of some people, A mother not only thinks her children popular with the neighbors, but sahe imagines them so smart that all her acquaintances envy them., A little learning is all right when proper|y added to. Bome girls have trouble in gotting husbandsâ€"and nothing but trouble We know some railway bridges that seem to be dependert on Proviâ€" dence and a coat of paint. Hope is a good thing, but a meal ticket enables one to eat. To feel crushed when one is mereâ€" ly brokeâ€"that is human. When a man starts down hill, he finds everything greased to assist The unwritten law countenancing the resort to arma is part of the Galâ€" lic temperament. It is more powerâ€" ful than a hundred statutes. guilty of an assault with deadly weapons with intent to kill. And M. Caillaux, a former Minister of Finance, should have been the last to set am example of lawâ€"breaking. But he would have been the most as tonished man on earth had anyone attempted to put him under arrest. Should a participant in one of these combats be killed (which never hapâ€" pens, by the way), his opponent would not be tried for murder. It is probable that no notice would be taken of the affair beyond the holdâ€" ing 0 a formal inquest on the bedv. Agaln letter when tical guilt, While other nationalities speak virtuously of the duel as a relic of barbarism, it remains the Frenchâ€" man‘s favorite outdoor sport. He may become enthusiastic over footâ€" ball, go in thousands to see a ‘"comâ€" bat de boxe,"" but there is only one event that will cause him to fight for a place in front of a newspeper bulletin board or argue passionately for the privilege of a look at one of the extras distributed in his favorite caleâ€"the latest duel. That the pubâ€" lie is excluded from these affairs of honor is a surprising concession to the proprieties ; the principals could rake down a tidy little sum by charging an admission fee. But they charging an admission fee. But they iee to it that their deeds do not go inrecorded. The newspaper reportâ€" >rs and the movingâ€"picture men are rllowed among those present. The American baseball writer has nothâ€" ng ow the Parisian journalist who pecializes on duel stories, and very cinema theatre in the capital eatures the films of a sensational Ilue! within two days after its ocâ€" Is Still the Frenchman‘s Favorit« Sport. During this war we might as well prepare to hear all the classic acâ€" eusations. Each nation is reasonâ€" ably sure to charge its opponents with all the inhumanities that have come down in history. And most of the accusations will be supportâ€" ed by "nothing more than rumors. Already Belgian reports have acâ€" ecused ~Germans sof "wiping out whole villages‘‘ of innocent people ; with shooting the wounded ; with abusing the white flag. Already the French have charged the Germans with shooting innocent civilians; with wanton destruction of proâ€" perty ; with brutal treatment of woâ€" men. Already the Germans have charged the French with forcing German women to work in the fields, while Frenchmen captured and held in Germany are «imply put in prison | ti t NOTES AND COMMENT s POoINTED PARAGRAPHS. It ma re is a law on the books st dueling, but it is a dead ._ Technically M. Cailleaux, he crossed swords with a poliâ€" opponent not long ago, was ntrue n DUEL 1N FRANCE. girl is never happy until in love and then she is he common it if be taken LFC horrible man W n they are ty ir does not convert ng â€" fiend n tt onfined the books w ranted that it r ;,r‘ i;is of~' With the tendency toward richer materials that was predicted a few nds, filled | weeks ago there has already come and arson | a return to favor of metallic lace. he remains | Sometimes filet lace shows ae:);t- % tern wrought in silver threads. MCC befure. ' Brocade foundation bodices â€" made ctualy 96â€" | of colored silk and metallic threads ned to the | are shown in many of the newest as the men | evening gowns. The newest hats nations, in | show trimmings of metallic roses re â€" about | and the ribbon manufacturers show a heavy demand for gold and silver trage and ribbonsâ€"probably in anticipation ,nf the autumn demand from millinâ€" ses be °x not actu ‘‘The King holds his power by the grace of God, to whom alone he is responsible.. He chooses his own r.th, and only decides his actions rom this point of view .‘ ‘‘There is only one master in this country. I am he, and I will not tolerate another.*‘ ‘‘There is only one lawâ€"my law : the law which I myself lay down." ‘‘The soldier must not have a will of his ownâ€"they must all have only one will, and that will is mine." "A ruler may be voryjé;;gre& able, and I will be disagreeable if I think it necessary." ‘"As I look upon myself as an inâ€" strument of the Lord, I am indifferâ€" ent to the point of view of the preâ€" sent day." ‘‘I am the possessor of an inflexiâ€" ble determination to proceed fearâ€" lessly in the path that has once been recognized as the right one, and this in spite of all opposition." â€"‘"Shame on the man who aban donse his king ‘‘You wear the Emperor‘s uniâ€" form ; you have thereby received a preference over other men." ‘"Remember the maxim of an old Emperor, who said : ‘The Emperor‘s word must not be twisted or exâ€" plained away.‘ * Kaiser Looks On Himself as Instruâ€" ment of the Lord. Mr. J. M. Kennedy, says the London Daily Express, has collectâ€" ed a series ol illuminating quotaâ€" tions from the Kaiser‘s speeches, and his little book ‘"The War Lord," gives a complete picture of the ruthless egomaniac who has plunged Evrope into mourning. Here is what Wilhelm of Hohenzolâ€" lern says about himself : ' The newest sweaters slip on over 'the head. They are made with a | sixâ€"inch opening at the neck ‘ in | front, which can be buttoned up or |\left open as one desires. These sweaters were first seen at the fashionable watering _ places in France. They are made in wool jersey in pale blue, yellow, brick t ted and pink. j l At the fashionable European reâ€" sorts during the last few weeks a return of the shawl has been reâ€" ported. These shawls, which are worn as evening wraps, are large squares of rich silk with an eightâ€" eenâ€"inch friage lending grace and suppleness to their folds. They are highly suggestive of Spanish mode and are especially effective when draped about the body or when worn with the Empress Eugenie gown. Â¥ A white silk lace veil is edged along the lower edge with inchâ€" wide black ribbon with a white piâ€" cot edge. It is extremely smart. White and Black Shoes, Smart black patent leather shoes are piped about the top with white kid and aro laced with white silk shoe laces. RESPONNIBLE ONLY TO Gop A few weeks ago fashionable woâ€" men thought they had struck the newest note when they began to wear their artificial flower someâ€" where under the left ear, but fashion forever eludes the grasp of its devotees. And now just as we have readjusted the artificial flowâ€" ers on all our gowns fashion changes her mind. The left hip is now the correct point for the rose or poppy that lends distinction to the gown. A new green satin evenâ€" ing frock shows a large pink rose on the left hip and one of the new Preâ€" met models is a cream color taffeta with a large black velvet poppy caught nonchalantly on the skirt at the same point. Whether or not we shall wear the boutonniere chosâ€" en for our fall suit on the left hip of the skirt is a matter for speculaâ€" tion. Stranger whims than that has fashion taken. + The Newest Train. One of the newest Premet model!s shows a train made of the end of the sash. =The sashâ€"if such it can be calledâ€"is drawn around from a point above the waistline in front, back over the hips to a large bow half way down the back. Here one of the ends is transformed into the train, which extends nearly a yard beyond the hem of the skirt. a The New Suit Coat. The probable length of the suit coat for the coming autumn and winter has been a question of much speculation. The latest reports seem to indicate that we shall have much variety. Already some of the newest models are shown in short length coats. There are also medâ€" ium and threeâ€"quarter length coats and the sevenâ€"eighth coat. is perâ€" haps the newest and because of its warmth probably will be one of the most popular lengths for winter wear. Where the Flower Is Worn Are Shawls to Return? Ribbon Edged YVeil. The New Sweaters. The Richer Note. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 22, 23. And as they woere catingâ€" Not before or after they had eaten, but while they were eating, Jesus taught them the significance of the memorial. It could not be underâ€" stood apart from the actual eating. The Lord‘s Supper will mean little as a theory or an explanation. It must be partaken of to be underâ€" stood. The ten lepers were healed sus did when he looker into the countenance of Judas. Did their eyes meet? How could they? How could Judas face Jesus? _ â€"Woe unto that manâ€"When we hear Jesus say, ‘"‘Woe unto you, seribes and Pharisees, hypocrites," we can see the heat of his scorn annihilate those whom he accuses as fire buros dry stubble. But when he says, ‘"‘Woe unto that man,"‘ there is a depth of pathos which we cannot fathom. As later Jesus cried, ‘"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do," so now in like agony he cries out, ‘‘Woe unto the betrayer.‘" There is no scorn, no biwexf'nel;. d];!fre is‘ only pity and or: Ju No one felt the hm of the human heart as Jesus did when he touched the heart of Judas. No one saw the blackness of the human soul as Jeâ€" sus did when he looker into the countenance of Judas. Did their "he that eateth with me,‘"‘ "‘shall betray me.‘‘ Now he says, ‘"One of the twelve."" The one of the twelve was no longer of the you of the inâ€" ner cirele. Although he had not yet gone out, he already had taken himself away from the intimacy, the fellowship, of the twelve. He was now only one of a number, not one of a fraternity. ‘"He that aiteth with me‘‘ is changed to ‘"he that dippeth with me in the dish.‘""‘ Only three or four were near enough to dip with Jesus in the dish. Hence the range of the guilty one was narrowed. 21. Even as it is written of himâ€" Compare Psalm 41. 9, ‘"Yea, mine own familiar friend, in whom I trusted, who did eat of my bread, hatk lifted up his heel against me.‘ 20. One of the twelve, he that dippeth with me in the dishâ€"In verse 18 Jesus said, ‘"One of you," One by one â€" This expression would seem to leave no doubt that Judas also asked the question. Can it be possible that Judas did not realize the enormity of his act and in good faith asked whether he, too, would betray Jesus!? One would like to think so, but it is hard to believe Judas was so blunted in moral sense! 19. Is it 1!â€"As Jesus in verse 18 did not have the betrayer, but the act of betrayal, in mind, the disciâ€" ples do not know who was meant. So they each in turn ask him the question, "Is it I?" Even he that eateth with meâ€"He, not a particular disciple, but a taâ€" ble companion. Not the culprit is in Jesus‘s mind, but the awfulness of the offense. One who could sit at meat with Jesus in this intimate reâ€" lationship and be a traitorâ€"this, even to Jesus, was inconceivable. 18. And as they sat (reclined)â€" As they lay upon the cushions to partake of their food only a few of the disciples could be near him. In fact, only four were in close proxâ€" imity. Cometh with the twelveâ€"He came with them, rather than they came with him. If there ever was a time when he needed his disciples, it was now. Yet the emphasis upon his coming with them would indicate that the writer felt they needed his protection rather than he theirs. 17. And when it was eveningâ€"The usual time for eating the passover. But it is also suggestive to note that the night time is the peculiar time of evil deeds. 15. He will himself show you a large upper room furnished and readyâ€"The disciples were not to be left at the mercy of a servant or any one whom they might chance to meet in the house. Jesus had alâ€" ready arranged with the master himself about the room and direcâ€" tions thereto. Large, sufficient for all the disciples; upper, above the ground floor, where disfurbance would be less likely ; Furnished with table cushions so that they could recline as was customary at a forâ€" mal meal. 14. Where is my guestâ€"chamber !â€" My guestâ€"chamber. The emphasis on the personal pronoun indicates that Jesus had already made arâ€" rangements with the master of the house. He spoke of the room as his in the sense that it was the one he had arranged to occupy for the time being. A man bearing a pitcher of water â€"Women were the water carriers in Palestine. A man bearing a waâ€" ter pitcher was a very unusual sight. He would attract attention at once. Hence the two disciples would have no difficulty in finding the one whom they were to follow. 13. Two of his disciplesâ€"All of the twelve could not have gone. They would have attracted too much attention. _ The whereabouts of Jesus must be kept secret, for the chief priests and scribes were after him. Could they have taken him without the intervention of Judas they would have done so and saved for themselves the paltry pieces of silver theyâ€" had promised to give Judas. Luke names the two who were sent, namely, Peter and John (Luke 22. 8). J 1 Corr. 11. 26. Verse. 12. Where wilt thou that we go and make ready !â€"The disciples assumed that Jesus would want them to prepare for the passover. They do not seem to be aware of the fact that Jesus had already made arranmgements for eating the passover with his disciples. _ _ Lesson . II. . The Last slppeg. Mark 14. 12â€"25. Golden Text, Te sugpar scapg LESSON INTERNATIONAL LES8ON, OCTOBER 11. Cenght chidren. ‘The most skilful ! wood carvers in the d fiv%fi in~ humble e'urrou.flg@’. families are engaged in toy makâ€" ing. Even the childron help. No other nations can compéete with the Germans and the Austrians in the manufacture of jointed and bisque dolls. The successful farmer has sharp as a raiser. The Black Forest is the traditionâ€" al home of nearly alltheboyoflwt delight children. The most skilful wood carvers in the d l‘iv%fi in~ humble s'urroum”-'. families are engared in Lao w~al\ tarts speak both German and French, and decid» individually whether they will perform military service for Prussia or for Belgium. Maresnet has not yet been heard from in the present conflict. ‘ The republic has an administrator of its own, composed of a burgomasâ€" ter and 10 members of a council. The burgomaster is both a Prussian and a Belgian subject. The inhabiâ€" ’ At one time the community beâ€" longed to Austria, It was later anâ€" nexed by France and made the subâ€" ject of quite a little dispute beâ€" tween Napoleon I. and the Prusâ€" sians. But at the Congress of Vienne, 1815, nobody seems to have thought of Maresnet, and to this day the country is an independent republic. For a time there was some dispute between Belgium and Prussia about the territory on acâ€" count of the rich cadmium mine loâ€" cated there, but even this is now exâ€" tinet. J an area of 1,400 acres, a poptilé.tigl; of 3.500. Maresnet lies on the border of Belgium and Prussia, between Verâ€" viers and Aixâ€"laâ€"Chapelle. It has Enropean Powers Don‘t Trouble to Annex It. If there is an advantage in a country being large there is also an advantage in its being small, proâ€" vided it is small enough, says the Wall Street Journal. The Republic of Maresnet, also called Klemis and sometimes Alterberg, owes its independent existence to the fact that it is so small that the Euroâ€" pean powers don‘t even take the trouble to annex it. New in the kingdom of Godâ€"Jeâ€" sus‘s death would be a complete transformation of the idea of the kingdom of (God. Every vestige of the thought of a material supremacy would be left in the tomb. Whon he reappeared the ascendancy of the spiritual would be supreme. _ 24. Of the covenantâ€"Some anâ€" cient authorities insert the word new before "covenant‘‘ Most men make wills. Dying men, if in posâ€" session of mental faculties as well as material goods, want to make proper disposition of their earthly effects before death. Jesus had no temporal acquirements. He had spiritual treasures. He, too, would make a will before his demise. But what he disposed of was an intangiâ€" ble entity that would never dimiâ€" nish as the years went on, and of which all men, if they were willing, could become the beneficiaries. When he had blessed, . . . when he had given thanksâ€"Jesus was in the mood of benediction and thanksâ€" giving. There was no dark cloud on his brow as yet. Even in Gethâ€" semane, where his attitude was one entirely of submission, his eyes were still clear and his face bright.: Out of all this evil good would come. This is deepâ€"seated conviction. Not that there must be evil for good to come, but out of evil that seemingly could npt be avoided good would come. And could Jesus ever have had far distant from his mind the meaning of that hour and the hours that were immediately to follow! That he could be thankful at so exâ€" treme an hour was indicative of his close union with the Eternal and his understanding of that union. _ as they went (in the act of going) to do Jesus‘s will. So the Sacrament of the Lord‘s Supper has efficacy as a fact, in the actual observance thereof, and not in a declaration, merely, of its historical authentiâ€" city, sSMALLEST REPUBILC SAFE. A cartoon from the New York Evening Telegram, which shows the view taken in the United States of German militarism. Toys From Black Forest. to A LA BERLIN. "It isn‘t quite sure, the doctor is coming again," ‘"Well, madam, is your husband out of danger *‘ even a band or a Afe and drum corps can get onto a battlefield, the Beotch regiment« still hang to their bagpipers, or at leuthtbeiflr blsg pipers hang to them. No English re?;u;:hto nfig ugtfia to music 16 the war, but the English War Office didn‘t count the bagpipe as a musical instrument, much to the de. light of the Beotch fighting men. ners and to substitute khaki for Highland hues, but they‘ve got to be khaki kilts, not khaki trousers. In theee days of highâ€"powered guns and ccientific wariare when all the oldâ€"fangled fashions in fighting have been thrown away and not ine Scotch regiments won‘t give up their kilts. They have reluctantâ€" ly permitted the War Department to take away from them their plaids and their brightly colored banâ€" ners and to substitute khaki for The British War Office Has mitted Them., Now that they are back in the barn, Roger cares for them, and he says that in the fall he is going to take them to the county fair. â€" Youth‘s Companion. In the spring, when Broad and Bright were a year old, they were sent off to pasture to remain all summer. It was a long way from the house, but almost every day Roger found time to go and see them. ‘They always came running to meet him as soon as he was in sight, and usually he had some salt or apples in his pocket for them. During the school vacation, Roâ€" ger drove them down into the woods one dav, and surprised his father by the size of the load of wood that they were able to haul to the house. Broad andâ€" Bright were four months old when Roger first yoked them together. It was much more of a task to make them work side by side than it was to teach them to haul the cart singly, but Roger was a patient teacher. By getting them used to the yoke, and by doâ€" ing a little every day, he soon had them broken so that he could walk beside them and guide them with a small stick, just as his father did the old oxen. They came to like it, BAGPIPES GO TO THE FROXT The new calf, which Roger named Broad, was red, with a white face, just like Bright, and it was hard to tell them apart. But Roger always knew. In a few weeks Roger began to Parness one or the other of the pair nto a little cart, just as be had often harnessed Laddie, the Seotch eollie. Then Broad or Bright, as the case might be, would haul Roâ€" ger round the yard and up and down the road, just as Laddie would. "If you care for them and train them,"‘ said Mr. Rockwood, "in a few years you will have a fine pair of oxen." ‘V €110. When Bright was about six week" old, Roger‘s father brought home another calf of about the same age, and gave it to Roger for a mate for Bright. £ERTM ACOBOCC _ Bright has belonged to Roger ever since it was a little calf, and blundered awkwardly across its pen on legs that seemed far too long. Roger taught Bright to drink milk out of a small pail, and when it was no more than a week old, he began to lead it round the vard Some boys who live have dogs for playmates, pet lambs, and others : ate enough to have & boy, Roger Rockwood, h: steers, and no boy ever | playmates that gave him piness. Their names & and Bright. reAtnâ€" ons cnndccls. Aak.actiih iin alside o. s s hy o.z ie e . + 6 ..&‘:;}’_»5‘”_\‘ BiSpeiLs t e 6 ol ons mare‘ t ..~ _ 9 " "i““;“fi:’f iBX »ablemiee)s m po e M ic t ol uon c 3 0 P e t Another Crisis. s who live on farms or playmates, some have and others are fortunâ€" to have a colt. One Rockwood, has a pair of no boy ever had animal hat gave him more hapâ€" cirâ€"names are Broad Perâ€" Buttermilk has one characteristic which makes it a fine remedial agent in all ailments which arise from the sluggish excretion of waste matter, such as gout, rheuâ€" matism and obesity. The lactic acid contained in it attacks and dis solves every kind of earthly deâ€" posit in the blood vessels. Thus it kleep:nt:e,ninl h:tnd ;.rterien so supâ€" ple ree t they cannot get clogged, eliminating ‘deposits of ; ~‘*IV is a good nerve tonic, and it is said to ward off rheumatism . Burns.â€"The first thing to do is to exclude the air from the burn. For this a thick paste made of biâ€" carbonate of soda may be used. Equal parts of linseed oil and lime water (carron oil) should be used, if handy; if not use vaseline or sweet oil. Health Notes. ‘Celery is a good nerve it is said to ward off rh« h'lfloâ€"Thc firct thin as nausea, depression, and mental depression, and mental disturb ance. After the first dose, they will bear almost anything rather than repeat the experience. _ Buj most persons are not thus protect ed by nature : the drug gives then a sensation o{ wellâ€"being, bot} physical and mental. That clear thinking and increased power a: imagination â€" that opium â€" at first causes has led many a noble intelâ€" lect down the terrible path of morâ€" phinism that leads to physical. mental, and moral destruction. No man can safely administer drugs to himself ; above all, drugs that have the property of quieting physical pain.â€"Youth‘s Compani»n. Howsn Many a brokenâ€"down victim of morphine was betrayed by a little bottle of toothache relief or headâ€" ache cure. The relieft was so speedy and so complete that the sufferer could not resist the temptâ€" ation to work the miracle again and again. Presently he became unable or unwilling to bear the least physiâ€" cal discomfort, and now he doses himself at the first syimptom, â€" inâ€" stead of seeking medical advice in order to remove the trouble that causes the pain. Fortunately, many persons canâ€" not take morphine in any â€"form without such disagreeable â€" results Home of these preparations, howâ€" ever, are not harmless. They often contain, under the guise of a "tonic‘‘ or ‘‘restorative,‘"‘ smoeâ€" ‘‘tonic‘‘ or ‘‘restorative,‘" someâ€" thing that gives a temporary fillip to the nervous system, and conâ€" ceals symptoms that could be easâ€" ily cured if they were recognized in time. Still others, and these are far more dangerous, contain some form of cheap alcohol, or worse yet, morphine or cocaine. Selfâ€"Drugging, The pernicious habit of selfâ€"drugâ€" ging persists; new preparations are everywhere advertised, and the old favorites still appear to hold their own. Although the habit is unfortunate, and grows upon its victim, like any other bad habit, it is a comf{ort to know that many of the most widely advertised patâ€" ent medicines are at least harmâ€" less. They can do good only through the power of suggestion, but the chief argument against them is the waste of moneyâ€"money that might be spent for wholesome food and healthâ€"giving vacations. '.MQM‘. In order to understand the jusâ€" tice of this tribute we only have to remind ourselves that it is work which has made the world what it actually is at the present moment. All that we mean by civilization, in the material sense, is the result of toil in the sweat of men‘s brows. For ages past the men who have labored with their handsâ€"the farmâ€" ers, the woodsmen, the blacksmiths, the spinners, the buildersâ€"have been contemptuously regarded as An Inferior Grade of Humanity, as little better, indeed, than aniâ€" mails! And yet while kings have fought and noblemen hunted, while gilded courtiers have twirled their scented handkerchiefs and toyed with their jewelled swords, while soâ€"called superior classes of all ages and countries have sported, gambled and debauched, these same inferior laborers have made the world what we see it toâ€"day ! It is their toil which has cleared away forests, cultivated farm lands, opened mines, constructed railâ€" COCREPSROADrAA NCR O Here is a very different idea of work from that contained in the opening chapters of Genesis. Acâ€" cording to this prophet, labor is not a curse laid upon man for his sin, but a service so holy that the very doing of it constitutes a ‘"‘prayer.‘‘ â€" Therefore does he sound the praises of the workingâ€" man as others have sounded the praises of king and soldier. The ploughman, the jewel cutter, the blacksmith, the potterâ€"all these, ‘‘although they are not sought for in the council of the people nor exâ€" alted in the assembly. though they 1 sit not in the seat of the judges nor understand the covenant of judgâ€" ment,‘"‘ are still to be numbered among the great and honorable of mankind ! For these workmen maintain the fabric of <theâ€" world and inâ€" the handiwork of their craft is their prayer.â€"Ecclesiasticus xxxviii, 34. Their Work Has Made the World Whq; <it Actually is at the Present Moment THE SWEAT 0F MBN‘S BROY; HEALTH og Bridgetâ€"Shure it my hible to be a cook whe quit when ye feel like it Maidâ€"My brother the navy., a is to find out which is w» woman may not be able just when her husband ; but she can always rewmem dress she had on at the t are two kinds of women in * worldâ€"the one who loves to m&"" age, and the one who loves *o be managedâ€"and all one has * dr "Love never knocks at of a woman‘s heart; he & drives philosophy out, sh« dom the door, and rules su; To go withoutâ€"and look a liked itâ€"is one of the first to be learned in this wor‘d man never falls in love woman who studies him.‘ ‘‘Woe,‘" he says, ":o that has forsaken al\l |» and divine, and will be b)' the Lord of Hosts. ceeds to picture the flig leon III. before his en spot near Redan,. and pearance, never to retut after telling of the co suscitation of France, h with the declaration quo the only prophecy which be fulfilled Then the seer 1 four years (1870) « be mustered wit! war â€" and â€" ma» poror. A mJ of the Austr days‘ war‘ in t} inconceivable . it will be rems« checked his vic Vienna because Emperor Napole ing to march hi Rhine in the Pr A Mork Said Wiliianm 11 Last of His bin ‘"‘William, the second 0 will be the last King of | will have no other suce a King of Poland, a Ki ony, and a King of More than 600 years ag phecy was made by a monk of Mayence. Sin has been handed dlown to son, through the cent 'to-dl.y it possesses a star ficance. By plunging all to bloodshed Wilheim 11 ser, must stand or fall h The defeat of Germany his virtual disappeara world‘s dictator ; it may the disruption of the (i pire. . Well may one as the prediction of the « monk of byâ€"gone years true. Other predictions this ancient seer )71 amazingly wcorrect. | Th mentions William 1. b; scribes him marching as tria from vietory between ing and the harvesting « and as having his march « arrested at the very Vienna "by the word of a poreor.‘ A more accurai irritating calcer the joints and ; the muscles. chants the Home« ‘‘housebuilding, glassblowing, shipj ing, fisheuring," a there is nothing greater than these John Haynes Holn ‘‘Reaper," the ©~Gl ness is doomed as a tinction. Work im be the sole title to r man is the true pr his ‘‘Song of Occ chants the Homer . It is these facts which a teaching the supreme digy bor. Carlyle had these when he declared that w work alone, is truly noble when he revealed the bea ed through toil; Morris, preached and practised t of skiled craftmanship whenshe painted the "So, _ Death and Destruction would stand towering at my ; old. ‘‘Without these," say, author of Eedlesiasticus, "sh; a city be inhabited, nor sha sojourn or walk up and down in ; these maintain the fabrie world." roads, laid out and builded ¢;;;, L“ifi their work which has “relte'd wealth, founded nations, redeemed the waste places of the eart), reay. ed the vast monuments of civilizg. tion. Not more surely are ;,, pyramids of Egypt the memoria] not of the Pharoahs but »f theip driven slaves than are t)h» huge piles of stone and steel in our mo. ern cities the memorials of the \,, nunod toilers of this later age And not only is it work which has made the world what it is toâ€"day but it is work also which l’ow;u Y"u' world going from hour to hoj, 1 have food upon my table, c|o;}, ng upon my back, a roof over my head, books upon my shelves unl‘\ because a million hands are toiling in my service. Let this labor be suspend. ed for a little time, and PORETOLE PRiossp+ A Professional Hards» Thoughts for Wow! PuUS )e In m b n J11 n 1 CA n 1] 14 , ht There d in $ J F y A despatch iearned much, All the highâ€"cla: merly did nothing :‘_’f fur garmen usily engaged in ‘._‘ M'fikin clot! Servians Capi German Factories in Fur Cloth 7 "â€" Tanost vig for a winter « cently, appare ©conctived such A despatch {: (,hr.‘m are n in the last fow \ learned much . Russians Take Over Emper Nam‘s Prize Stock. A despatch from London s despatch received here from grad says that among the :1 able war trophies arriving a ensk is the entire stook ol William‘s famous pedigree< and stud horses capturced Russians from the Empeorer were taken to Mo ed to the Russiar stitute for dlistril tural breeding ass British Vessel : A despatch from says : The Kosmos =« arrived here with th« British steamer Banl was sunk by the Ge bimofl Eten, Peru the Bankfelds have â€" # British Consul her Oobtaining their liber said that their shin cn m_",llfidlt 850 GETTING R ‘‘"As showing t thought of the enem: considerable value, bureau. "It is n falsity of the tales but the applause an« lation of the writes gross treachery and . to have been done b: comrades."‘ cer, on the exterm gian village, as giv« reau, follows : ‘‘The countryside : troops. _ Neverthcles peasants must need men, as they mar vhe war were issue« Press Burean on W The stories were tak called ‘"Kriegs C was seized from English ports. Th« according to the buw a highly untrustwo the war and part!s ters from the front A despatch : German tales of MARVELOU A despatch from Bordea The defeat of 15,000 Guards who attacked the centre is thus described in tite Gironde : 4 Copy of German O Details of Defeat o in Which 2,0« A second time death into the d the blue smoke eould see the en« ing and officers rally the broken | Auberive, Department o d'e the artiilery and in: to come up from Soua: near Auberive, But wi m were preparing fence of Auberive a | Death‘s Head Hussars. a ““.‘e. eame across (hn« and fhelds with the inten prising the French art great silenc« As soon as advance was | PROUD OF The narratis mans from t) ominton. in PEDIGREED C \ATVH t in .Bosnia, whiâ€" capture of thrce 8. â€" The statement fewar tha f1 news of the received Fren« to hold the e 1 14 by B Sunn h

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