* i _" (\ 3 Black Agnes of Dunbarâ€"so called from her dark hair and skinâ€"is perâ€" haps the best known of all. Left in charge of Dunbar Castle, a fine Gallant Lady Banckes .who held Corfe Castle in the Civil War against the Parliamentarians, has a monument erected to her memory at Ruislip, in Middlesex, England. Stones and hbot embers were her weapons In years gone by it was quitso a common occurrence for women to do their share of the fighting. When ber lord went to battle it was left to his lady and retainers to guard the castle. Instances Where They Have Shown Great Bravery, Strangely medieval was the spirit with which the factory women of Liege recently repulsed the German invaders by pouring boiling water on their heads. There are those in England who believe the British Government to have gone into this war with Gerâ€" many without justification. George Bernard Shaw is among them. The Socialist members of parliament, Keir Hardie and Ramsay Macdonâ€" ald, are among them. These men. have spoken their minds freely. They attacked the government in print and their opinions are not censored. They were not molested. It is but to state a truism to say that freedom is freest toâ€"day in England. On the whole this humorous anâ€" alysis of the poet made more than balf a century ago holds good toâ€" dayâ€"with this difference : The posiâ€" tion of freedom in England "as a lawiully wedded wife" has grown stronger and more intrenched with years, while the grandmotherly poâ€" sition of freedom in Germany is beâ€" coming more cramped than ever. Er + The German poet Heine jestingly | The conv.nlmons may 1 lr d th ",Jq‘non which f.rfeâ€a.nd consist of twitcl viesciineca the post limbs, or the muscles dom occupies in the households of they may be complet Ewrope thus : The Englishman loves | muscles of the face, freedom like a lawfully wedded | and limbs are in a vik wife ; the Frenchman like a misâ€" | contraction Ul‘""f““t tress; the German like a grandâ€"| 209. The head is us Kih a s . | back and the thumbs mother. _ Differences with one‘s| on the palms of the | lawful wife may occur, and she may | sometimes issues from be divoreed. The charms of a misâ€"| and as the teeth may tress may wane, and shev may l:: :':)'tizsaz;&d;g:;rzl ecast aside. But one never **S5 | ror should the sent for aside a grandmother. It was not in | ag medical attention is constitutional England or in repubâ€" | the outset of the fit. ] lican France but in monarch‘al 'S“Spfljtfdlto be the ca1 Germany, according to the poet, l;:flk.]sl;@&e slmi:i :ft"t: that freedom was‘mmt strm‘)gly "~ [ and the child will quic trenched. The German did not | but; if this is due to rave about "grandmother,""‘ but a| food the child must be nook he would always spare her. emetic. Of cowrse this Are they to be envied, or are they to be pitied! That is as one looks at it. The most relentless foe of England, however, can wish them on‘ _ success in their peaceful enâ€" deavors and a safe return to their homes. _ Such victories as they achieve may be dearly bought with toil and even death, but on other: nations they will inflict no wound Ro here‘s good fortune to the good ship Endurance ! She is the Ship of Peace that has gone where war‘s alarms are unheard. o Asia, and the remotest jungles of Africa and South America. But they will not reach into the lonely seas where these men have gone. While half the world is at war they will be pursuing only knowledge and contending only with the eleâ€" ments. So here is one group of men who will know but the beginning of the greatest war that has ever afflicted humanity until after it is all over. Rumors and tales of that wor will be spread into the deepest rew. ses of polar exploration. Her comâ€" mander and many of her crew were limble to service with their counâ€" try‘s war fleets, and at once offerâ€" ed to perform that duty. It was held, however, that the task for which they had so carefully preâ€" pared was just as ‘"national"‘ as that of war, and they were bidd:n to proceed into the frozen seas. wHEN WOMEX FIGHT of science and with making addiâ€" tions to mankind‘s common stock of knowledge. It was the ship Endurâ€" ance, commanded by Sir Ernest Bhackleton, and bound on a mission _ When England‘s fleets went forth to battle two months ago there also went forth an English ship whose mission had nothing to do with either war or gain, but was conâ€" cerned only with the advancement NOTES ANDCOMMENTs It‘s the little things that annoy us, but one bad tooth will really fee!l as big as an acre. Smaill Boy (to charitable lady) â€" ‘‘Please, mother says, shes‘ much better of the complaint wot you gives her quinine for, but she‘s awâ€" ful ill of the disease wot‘s cured by port wine and chicken broth." met him with a swift swipe on the jaw, which put the aggressive Teuâ€" ton to sleep. So Scotland won the first battle of the war." ‘‘You will not say about my counâ€" tree vat you like.‘"" For about the time of a midge‘s wink the Beot was stunned, but he rallied, collectâ€" ed his forces, and, making a brilâ€" lNant charge, welted the German such a powerful one on the snout that the Teuton‘s head shot back and broke the window, while the blood from his nose dyed his shirt front. The German again advanced in brge, bpg again the Troon man a young fellow from Troon, while in a cornsr sat another young chap reading a paper. The three unoceuâ€" pied passengers entered into conâ€" versation about the war, and the Troon chap remarked that the Gerâ€" mans would be wiped out. Hardly had the prophecy crossed his lips, when the passive newspaper reader, without any declaration of war or other indications of bellicose fever, made a demonstration in force, swooped down upon the unsuspectâ€" ing Troon man and smote him a mighty swipe on the cheek, accomâ€" panying the biff with the remark : bat : ‘"In one of the compartments of the evening train from Troon just after the declaration of the war beâ€" tween Britain and Germany were an old gentleman and his wife and How a Seotchman Put An Aggres. sive German to Sleep, The following official report of the first engagement of the war is not supplied by the Press Bureau, but by a man, says the Glasgow Evening Times, who has the best authority for his details of the comâ€" The patient must be kept very quiet for some days, the food be light and easily digested, and the bowels be carefully wregulated by the use of mild aperients. â€"A Physician. cacy of the bath. ‘The child should remain in the bath for twenty minâ€" utes, and then be placed in bed. tack simple lancing of the gums will usually be sufficient to give relief, and the child will quickly recover ; but if this is due to indigestible food the child must be given an emetic. Of couwrse this cannot be given if the child is unconscious. The whole body of the child should be plunged into a very hot bath, with cold water, or ice, applied to the head. A tablespoonful of musâ€" tard added to the water may, asJ a counter irritant, add to the effiâ€" FIRST VICTORY oF THE wiarRr | ine convuisions may be partial, land consist of twitchings of the | limbs, or the muscles of the face, or | they may be complete, when the }muscies of the face, eyes, eyelids | and limbs are in a violent state of 'C(mtraction alternating with relaxâ€" ation. The head is usually thrown back and the thumbs pressed in upâ€" on the palms of the hand. Froth sometimes issues from the mouth, and as the teeth may clench upon the tongue and injure it, this froth may be tinged with blood. A docâ€" tor should ibe sent for immediately, as medical attention is required at the outset of the fit. If teething is suspected to be the cause of the atâ€" an excess of terror, anger and grief in the mother may occasion convulâ€" sions in the infant she is nursing. npo _ 102 I 1 Some children are more likely to suffer from convulsions than others owing to their nervous system being more easily upset. _ Convulsions are frequently caused ‘by tecthing, fright, indigestible food, and even is the very simplest form of first aid, but it would probably mean the saving of much pain, perhaps the loss of a limb and weeks of lost time. ‘be exceedingly careful as to the cleansing _ and _ protection _ of scratches and small wounds, as owâ€" ing to the nature of their work;, there is always a danger of being infected with the germs of tetanus. Workmen who are liable to meet with slight accidents from the handâ€" ling of rough boxes, stones and timâ€" ber should always carry a small tin box containing a piece of stickingâ€" plaster, some soft, clean rag, and a‘ tiny bottle of carbolic acid. This L i uie c t ies i pmvot ue P nte C NE oc l ful, are not serious enough to interâ€" fere with work, are frequently, if neglected, the forerunner of & seriâ€" ous illness. A slight scratch may cause a very ‘bad attack of bloodâ€" poisoning if foreign matter gets inâ€" to it. These slight wounds should never ‘be neglected. If splinters, bits of grit, fragments of metal or glass remain embedded in the fiesh this leads to inflammation, and perâ€" haps to bloodâ€"poisoning. Even the scratching of a mosquito bite may result fatally. Slight injuries of everyday occurrence should be proâ€" perly attended to. They should be well washed with warm water :o which a few drops of carbolic lotion has been added. See that no grit remains, and then bind up the limb or finger until the place has healed sufficiently to prevent the entry of foreign matter such as dirt, etc. Stablemen, in particular, should The Care of Slight Wounds. Slight wounds, such as small cuts, lacérations, abrasions, pricks and flstches, which though often painâ€" Cure Needed. Convulsions. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO All things are possible unto thee â€"Jesus could nofforget this. How bhe wrestled with the. Father for deliverance,! " * Howbeitâ€"not what I will, but what thou wiltâ€"All things were possible unto the Father. vet this thing was impossible for him. Jesus recognizes this impossibility ; but in this recognition he is neither lost in hopelessness nor despair. 37. Findeth them sleeping â€" The to make the approach closer more intimate. In the death : gle he called upon God his F: and when the end was near o cross the name of Father w his lips. and suggestive features of the Gethsamane struggle. 36. Abba, Fatherâ€"God, our Faâ€" ther. To the Hebrew Abba, "God,"" is added the explanation, ‘"Father ‘‘ In an intense and proâ€" longed pet.ition no term is too dear If it were possibleâ€"The pain at no moment was so poignant or piercing as to cause Jesus to forget that a bigher will was to be conâ€" sidered. Gladly, eagerly, would he have had the hour pass, but onâ€" ly if it were possible. In verse 36 he asks that the cup be removed. The bhour and the cup are solemn and suggestive features O! the: We uy css . & 85. And fell on the ground, and prayedâ€"The usual posture in pray â€" er was to stand. To kneel was morée submissive. But Jesus fell on the ground, on his face ; and he fell not only once, but continually. The imperfect of the verb to fall is used in the Greek. This denotes repeatâ€" ed action. Jesus was in a protractâ€". ed and desperate conflict. 1 on guard, for temï¬tazion, in its cruelest form was near them. » 34. Abide ye here, and watch â€" The struggle was awful for him ; it would have been overwhelming for the three tried and trusted disâ€" ciples. So he asks them to remain where they are while he goes furâ€" ther into the conflict. He asked them "to watch,"" not for him, but for them‘selyes. They needed to be the garden. The inner struggle he had already fought. He had spokâ€" en of it frequently. He had inâ€" structed his disciples as to how he must suffer. But when the actual outer conflict began he was greatly amazed, and sore troubled. Even the poise, the fortitude, the imagâ€" ination of the Saviour, which gave him a foresight of the tremendousâ€" ness and intensity of the encounter, could not prepare Jesus so that he would enter upon the conflict withâ€". out surprige. It came as a sudden‘ and aona_l?ieng revelation. And beganâ€"This was the beginâ€" ning of the outward struggle, of the awful experience of the Lord in He taketh with him Peter and James and Johnâ€"The same three he took with him to the Mount of Transfiguration. He needed closer companionship. They would unâ€" derstand him better than the rest. Perhaps he could depend on them‘ in his sorrow. At least so it seems that Jesus in his humanness thought. But he did not remain with the three. He went further away (about a stone‘s throw) from them (see Matt. 26. 36â€"46 ; Luke 22I 40â€"46). And he saith unto his disciples, Sit ye here, while I prayâ€"The disâ€" ciples would not understand his passion. ‘They might be sore disâ€" tressed in their faith, to see the Master in agony. Jesus would save them from this Hence he leaves them nearer the entrance to the garden and goes further in. It is not likely that he left them as an outpost to give warning of the apâ€" proach of the enemy or to protect him from assault. He was thinking of them, of their faith, not of the enemy. Had he considered the apâ€" proach of the unfriendly host he would have known that his disâ€" ciples could not have defended him against them. an olive orchard. The owner may have possessed an oil press in which the oil from the olives of neighborâ€" ing owners of olive orchards, for a consideration, was pressed out. Gethsemaneâ€"From the Hebrew gath shemen, meaning an ‘"oil press.‘"‘ This inclosed piece of ground is regarded as having been Verse 32. A placeâ€"An inclosed piece of ground. Lesson II. In the Garden of Geth semaneâ€"Mark 14. 32+42. Golden Text, Matt. 26.41. THE SUNDAY SChQOt LESSOX INTERNATIONAL LESSON, 0cToBER 18. nc end was near on the name of Father was on British Cycle Corps, with its Colt Gun, Fording God his Father, strugâ€" Brides with sour dispositions are apt to spoil hontymoons. 22 e en Would England or any other great nation, suggests Walpole, have tolâ€" erated with such patience the exâ€" clusiveness to which Russia is conâ€" demned!? "‘Asg surély as the river seeks the ocean, so does every great people gravitate towards its natural outletâ€"the sea. It may be possible to direct its march, just as it is practicable to turn the course of a river. It would be as easy to stop the river as to arrest the nation .‘ ataig ind s i hP ts x h c o 2222 L0 1312 always open, and every ship from the Black Sea must pass under the guns o'l WM’IQ! Ships â€" Hare toâ€" Pass Fortified Straits to Get to Ocean. Now that we are all thinking of that new map of Europe, which is to usher in a permanent universal peace, it is interesting to recall the words of Spencer Walpole on the destiny of Russia. Writing in 1882,_ Walpole considered that the peace of Europe would continue to be threatened so long as Russia, with a population of 80,000,000â€"it is now more than 170,009,000â€"had no mariâ€" time outlet for her commerce under her own absolute control. The trafâ€" fic of the Baltic must pass through a narrow strait, the White Sea is not 2s © RUSSIA WAXNXTsS Jesus ever uttered, yet withal filled with the deepest pity and unutterâ€" able regret for the one concerning whom the words were uttered. ioi 2R DAE hoi Tsc en him. Only the physical capture was wanting. He also, doubtless, desired to join the other disciples so that they would not be unduly frightened. He that betrayeth me is at hand â€"The most pointed condemnation Jesus ever uttered. vet withal fll2d 42. Arise, let us be going â€" He saw the lights winding down the hill and entering the garden. He knew that the company of arresters had come. He would not wait to have them seek him. He would go to them. Fo'r already had they takâ€" lï¬ons. He noticed now, doubtless, the moving lights in the distance and realized that the moment was at hand when he was to be betrayâ€" ed. The Greek word for betray and betrayer, which is used in the narâ€" rative whenever Jesus speaks of the betrayal, means ‘"‘betrayed unâ€" to death.‘" He was to be delivered unto those who desired to end his life. On this point Jesus was never deceived. He knew that the phyei~‘ cal end had come. The hour is come ; beholdâ€"As a general suddenly conscious that the time for action has come might speak, so Jesus spoke. Now that the inner fight was finished, he beâ€" came conscious of outward condiâ€" It is enoughâ€"The vigor of the vicâ€" tor is in his step. the firmness of one who has overcome is in his voice, and the light of the conquerâ€" or in his countenance. 41. Sleep on nowâ€"The battle was fought and won. _ The disciples could now sleep. Jesus had deep sympathy for them. He wanted them to get their rest. Their eyes were very heavy â€" Their eyes were weighted down ; it was impossible, so great was their weariness, to resist slumber. on his lips to the three disciples that they cease not to pray, Jesus again goes forth into prayer. What was needful for his disciples was necessary for him. That ye enter not into temptaâ€" tionâ€"Even in the throes of his own misery Jesus cannot forget his disâ€" ciples, and warns them to watch and pray incessantly that they fall not into temptation. They had all sworn him allegiance. How well he knew their weakness and how desirâ€" ous to save them from it ! 39. And again he went away, and prayedâ€"Almost with the counsel _ Sleepest thou?! couldest thou not watch one hour ?!â€"Simon, above all others, sleeping! The Simon, or rather the Peter, who a few moâ€" ments before had said : "If all shall be offended in thee, I will never be offended‘‘ (Matt. 26. 33). | 38. Watch and prayâ€"The original is, ‘‘Watch ye and pray." He said unto Peter, Simon â€" Simon was the old name of Peter before he had been changed into Petros, the rock. Did Jesus realâ€" ize that the rock in Peter was about to crumble and that bhis old name Simon would be more indicative of his real (that is, his old) self ? ‘ excitement and exertion of the last days were now making inroads upâ€" on the strength of the disciples. It is suggestive to note that on the Mount of Transfiguration â€" these three disciples also slept. A FREE PORT. Stream En Route to Join the Main Corps. a ce 00 a022, MUCoumadh L4°G what the Thames is to the English people. â€" It is a means of livelihood, too, forâ€"it carries more than. 2,000,â€" 000 tons of freightage each year, and is a symbol of national pros perity. |7°7 °7 vne 1ck of the siren Lorelei, and are overlooked by the comâ€" manding statue of Germaniaâ€"â€"the trophy of German vietory of 1870. Except during the eighteenth and the greater part of the nineteenth centuries, it has always * been a purely German river. It . became part of the dividing line betwem‘ France and Germany in 1697, when, Alsaceâ€"Lorraine was appropriated by France ; in 1870 it was won back by its children at the point of the n}v.ord.l-, I't“L is to the German race| what 41â€" ' 3 e sces SE PR ied in its channel ; its waters, of transparent green hue, flow the treasure of the Nibelungs round uwhe 1ock of the siren I strongest bulwark it was ; it was }bhere that Gaul and Teuton strugglâ€" ed for supremacy in the generations that followed. Flowing through a land elothed with vineyards, that yield a wine which is famed the world over for its exquisite bouquet and dry, piâ€" quant flavor, "Father Rhine‘" breaâ€" thes a spirit of song and legend and romance. Ruined castles crown the rugged and fantastic crags that hem If its channel > ite mmaknus 2a qoD oo IP 22 0 Sn e e y oi by the German soldiers alike in the hour of defeat and victory in the Francoâ€"German War ; being sung before the walls of Paris in that great campaign which ended‘ in vieâ€" tory for the Prussian forces. And now that their country is faced with a greater peril than any she has hitherto experienced, the words of that great war song bringing back memories of 1870, will be sung by: millions of the Kaiser‘s forces on land and sea. Truly the Rhine is a fit subject for a national song. Its banks were the scene of many of the fierce battles for supremacy which | Eook place between the Teutonic | The River Flows Through a Land of Fertile Vineyards. For generations past the Rhine has served to inspire the spirit of par triotism among his German childâ€" ren, who loved to call him "Father Rhine,‘"‘ â€" ‘"‘Wacht am Rheim‘"‘ was the great national song which was sung with an extraordinary fervor| posars s EY ® A new idea is the combination of black satin and plaid serge. The feather trimmed hat is the fashionable hat this season. The Japanest neck and the stand away c_olla_rs are still good. Both light and dark toned fitch furs will be fashionable. The silk jacket and short, loose coat are in good fashion. The old fashioned chenille em broidery has come back. Frocks of net armng;d in plaits or ruffles are favorites. Occasionally we see a hat with the mushroom brim. RHINE IN SONG AND sTORY The oriental note in dress has al most disappeared. The new tunics are not more than three yards wide. * Coat shapes range from the short to the redingote. _ + Brown velvet is as smart as black for street capes. The small hat is worn with the basque costume. _ Darker shades are noticed in the fall millinery. f The all black hat of velvet is still popular. Lansdowne‘s Weakness The hourglass figure is to be the fashion. One piece frocks are mostly of senge. | & All the new suits have longer coats. Fads and Fancies. Dyed laces are to be used. Beaded shell pins for the hair are new. sees very lew sticks ; its waters, _of a dee;; the Romans, whose , flow over , surge _ But how many of us are willing to follow God‘s leading when He does send out the light and truth for which we pray ? Is any one faci in human history more conspicuous than the persistent refusal of men, especially those identified with the Church, to hail the dawn of new light and the discovery of new truth! How many men welcom »d the light which God sent Into the world through the brains of Coperâ€" nicus, Galileo and Giordano Bruno? How many were willing to receive the truth which God sent on ha}f to .gee T ES BR eV CE Th:‘.‘i“.“‘.nf: sceneâ€"one step enough "Lead, kindly Light, amid the enâ€" cireling gloom, Lead Thou me on. The night is dark and I am far from ~. home, Lead Thou me on. Keep Thou my feet ; I do not ask There are few of us who â€" would not be ready to join in all sincerity in this great prayer of the Psalmist. Few of us, perhaps, who have not already joined in it more than once in our lives!â€" We all of us feel the need of more light upon our wayâ€" of new revelations of truth to save us from the besetting pitfalls of anâ€" cient error. Hence the universal response awakened by â€" Newman ;Ivhen he chanted his immortal vmnâ€" ‘"Oh send out bruth ; let them Kliii.. 3. FOLLOWING GOD‘S LEAD If We Want His Light Afraid to Receive Them had a wife !" Benevolent â€" Old Ladyâ€"*Poor man! And are you married ?" Beggarâ€"*"Bless your heart, kind lady ; do you think I‘d be relying on total strangers for support if I NyilP o t miivricigye _ An n.c.o. or private soldier enâ€" joys one privilege that is withheld from officers. This is the right of demanding a courtâ€"martial when sentenced to any punishment inâ€" volving a loss of pay. An officer, on the other hand, holds his commisâ€" sion at the King‘s pleasure, and can always be removed from the Army without any specific reason being assigned . 1 If a soldier is quartered on a garrison where stamps are not obâ€" tainable, he may send his corres pondence © unstamped, and the amount charged on delivery will be 1d., instead of double the deficiency, as is the Post Office rule in all other cases. ‘ Should soldiers be proceeding on furlough the : railway companies make them the concession of issuing return tickets at single fare, or a little over. This privilege is also granted to their wives and children. In the case of officers the practice is to allow them to travel firstâ€"class at reduced rates. The baggage of soldiers is exempt from dock dues and tolls, and soldiers themselves are not required to pay any tolls when passing over bridges, etc.,' provided â€" they be travelling on duity. ‘ When a soldier is travelling on duty in a district where military quarters are not available he is enâ€" titled to demand accommodation at any hotel or licensed house. This is called "billeting," and the maxiâ€" mum amounts to be charged are fixed by law as follows: For each night‘s lodging and attendance, 6d. ; for breakfast, 4d.; for supper, 2}4d.; and for dinner, 11!%d. If a soldier is accompanied by his horse he can demand 10 lbe. of oats, 12 lbs. of hay, 8 lbs. of straw, and staâ€" ble room for 1s. 9d. The Dawn of New Light. Every soldier, provided he be on the roll of electors, has the same right as a civilian to record his vote in a Parliamentary election ; and if he himself is elected to represent a constituency, he is entitled to take his seat in the House of Commons without asking anybody‘s permisâ€" sion. Should, however, a nonâ€"comâ€" missioned officer or private soldier who has become an M.P. be proâ€" moted to a commission, he has to vacate his seat. A soldier who has a commission at the time of his election is not required to vacate his seat. An officer is also permitted to emâ€" ploy a soldier servant without havâ€" ing to pay a license for him. Noris an officer required to serve on a jury, or to fulfil any municipal apâ€" pointment. If an officer occupies Government qauarters he does not have to pay any local rates in respect of his house, This is because such a buildâ€" ing is held Ito be occupied by the Crown, and the Crown is always exempt from local rates. To begin â€"with, no soldierâ€"whatâ€" ever his rankâ€"can be sued for any debt or damages under £30 in valâ€" ue. Consequently, if an accommoâ€" dating broker permits Pte. Aitkins to dabble on the Stock Exchange to this amoust he cannot recover his money in the eveat of a loss. Simiâ€" Jarly, it is no good bringing a libel action agains him unless the damâ€" ages claimed exceed £29 19s. 11%d.| Privileges Britain Bestows Upon â€"Her Fighting Mon. Every British sold‘er on the active listâ€"from fieldâ€"marshal down to the lastâ€"joined recruitâ€"enjoys certain definite and special privileges not shared by civilians. These priviâ€" leges affect him in various ways,. says a writer in London Answers. _ many of us are willing God‘s leading when He out the light and truth e pray ? Is any one fact THE SOLDIER‘S RIGHTS. re few of us who would dy to join in all sincerity at prayer of the Psalmist. » pgrhaps, who have not thy light and thy lead me.â€"Psalms, conspicuous isal of men, ed with the wn of new Oolut and Truth We Musit Not B ~ When He Sends Them Out till ‘"‘the night is John Haynes Holmes However this may be. is sureâ€"the prayer in ow be taken altogether or : If we want God‘s light we must not be afraid : them when He sends th His own time and in His When dawne, His "kin< amid the encircling zi‘ must hail its blessed ra: brave enough_to follow i c as we think? Do we really want L revelations of the D® Word! Are we not pretty well 0B tented, after all, with out own C®" fortable darkness and our own f8" iliar errors f The Supreme Example of all. how did the world accept V ‘"light of knowledge of the glory God (which was) in the face of J® Christ" ? Do we offer this pral for light and truth quite as serio & century ago through searches <f the soâ€"called crities of the Bible! How professed Christians are [ this moment to accept quibble, protest or apologs greatest of all modern reve of the divine mind, the docu evolution _ And if the willi of men to "{follow up" has thus doub‘ful in the intol reaim, what shall we say as t attitude in the moral realm did the Florentines look up« light which flamed in the wo Bavonarola! How did uppe" ed Englishmen fee) about the disclosed by John Wesley an fellow Methodists! Or. to ta believer * Aunt Grace hugged h« ‘‘Yes, and I think your bu makeâ€"believe, because now all right."â€"Youth‘s Comq ‘"Didn‘t Goldilocks corv an more *‘ asked Ethel. "Of course not." The little girl touched her fore head softly, and said, "Then ! won‘t. But, Aunt Grace. it wasnt true, was it!? Wasn‘; it a mak ‘‘Kind Hands wou‘ld put â€" Gool Bottle‘s hat on. and would tak her up, and Two Feet would go pit ter patter up the stairs, and pitte patter through the long entry t the cupboard, and there Ki Hands would put Good Bots ."’{l' Aunt Grace vont on D4 Good Bottie wou! say to the bum ‘Now don‘t worry. 1 make yo smart, and then you‘ll kao enough not to hurt any more.‘ An then she would cry out to Kin Hands, ‘Please put my hat on an take me home, because Goldilock has stopped crying. and I am n needed .‘ Here Aunt Grace bruised place withou: Ethel, to whom Good for the time being, a although she knew as \ I that it was only 0 Grace‘s "make4believe ‘‘Was Goldilocks® bumy white 1 "Yes. or it would hav Good Bottle hadn‘s been help. Kind Hands would the cupboard, and catc) Botltle, "and Two Feet wo patter through the long , pitler patter down th« where Goldilocks was c then Good Bottle would s ry, and take my hat off and take my hat off° T\ pull the cork out: And ; Hgnds would bathe the «o dy,‘ and sweet ‘medd Good Bottle â€" heard ery, she would say, > Hands, and take me Hands, and take me ‘How old are y« TSik." ‘And when were ‘My last birthda on : ‘‘As long as no o Botitle was conteni with the others ; the» of bitter ‘meddy." a \â€"Here Fhel rememt and begun to cry Grace paid no aiteni _ **Now, Aunt Grace a story,‘‘ said the 1i Aunt Grace beg shelfâ€"in the cupboa: ‘‘No, tell ‘once p, S‘jd E‘/he]: vAllDl Grace under liar words, so she ‘"Once upon a time C ed on ithe shelf in And as long as no 0; nad to any new on, took a bottle in one took Ethel on her j "TI‘ll tell you a story Ethel stopped ery. ment. If she did no; she knew that she gin to cry again ; as did tell good "make Aunt Grace said, ~ thing on," and then louder ; she was af)», forehead would sma»;. ferred the pain tha: Eithel had fallen 4. her forehead; she i loudly as if she were tempered little gir) . Young Foliy “M‘MM" "A Makeâ€"Belie, 6p,® Answered your bump wasd she bep on« d { Jesus prave a KC trut «1 vhnine Ret m n ling at 11 j€ gl many thit we 1 her a ruth How the as$t ye Bottle liy cupboar and gryyy , i. $s me up n Cas UA hey pun Vé Z, ant me put he} and thy IM"‘ "& A. ut woy 1Ch nt #l that 1 she alr I p H Oy 16 are Row? l‘e:’w Ts 1nd and Agap And TD Ay tX i king Ant PTii €Ping Ome Pre d Fl;uo tells highly train faed he . cated , ‘ been taught the red trou The dogs a AVIATORS BU Frenchman Wounded Bullet Through highly useful in Taught to Rear at Sight of Trousers of PFrench Soldiors A despatch from Paris =a; FN tells of the capture s highly trained German spy d The animals are wonder{ully â€" &‘v_ .h_ Figaro says. and 1 Lost OH the Batmatio of Crows 1. A despatch from Pa luflcero publishes ::(m Amcona, in Itals 1¢, W‘{flls the pondent of the Ho which declares that / torpedo boats and : torpedoâ€"boat destrove lost off the coast of 1 result of coming in mines. The Ancona « that a majority of t the orews <f these «i their lives, fighting will again in the « fury, he cavs Kubscriptions for $250 Koon Be Called A despaitch from Pet The Bourse Gazettoe |~ ing to favorable news ! of war mblcn'pt»iuu..u w for an internal loan ~4 rubles ($250,000,000; cent. A writer in T zeite estimates that Germany will drag on because the winter cam: have an intensive cha d. ‘l\o demn.nd-s 0 in this countiry, the ( would be enormous, ton trade the distre would be severe. T trade, he added, w pletely broken down ers‘ Nmooal Cor was not at all sur not a little promat ing a very conside unemployment as < A despatch from David JJoydâ€"Georg the Exchequer, in a nesday to a deputat day night that it of the Intercolonial erate freight over winter. ‘The line | serves large pulpw GT.R. freight depa been notified of th« decision to operate HMoyd George says Otho: A‘m from Bordca A despatch fr That section of t continental Rail selme, cast <~f _ Monecton, N.B , and it was state« MIX AUSTRIAN s~#IP= > coast guards on t] Bchiermonikoog, in off the province of weather wirs clear calm, and the destr ly be scen cruising | of the Fims. Sudde: saw a high colum: A despatch from London The Admiraity on Wednesday wâ€"“l announcem * the British submarine F9 ha “‘w Wmd to her bas *H" “M‘n destrover « mouth of the Ems River, b« the Notherlands and Eas land, in the North Sea. Th marine is under command of Commander Max K. Hon was this same submarine und same commander which mad ilar dash and sank the G cruiser Mela off Heligo!a mb“ l:L A_l on the fo: A 1.C.R. Intends to Oper Over N.TR. GERMAN DF sion, the Eo has «: her home port. The action tbook ; and was witnessed British Submarine Craft Off th ©orrox TRadDE HGV id wmight to rear at t "'_‘ trousers of Frenc CGERMAX sPy poos RUSSIA*® BIG LoA® qUEBEC 1O MOoXCtoA awre said ert of French a by his mechan i« to m machine a Will Be Buss of Railwa red rechame, Quin chine and gave manoeuvre the O)8 b)i) l \ s M