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Durham Review (1897), 22 Oct 1914, p. 2

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[(* I‘ n,. 13 [4§ It ada of t imngr ted me€ th {+ ployes Aceordingly he stationed himself at the door as they came back from dinner and mentioned all those whom he believed to be married, and in almost every case he was "How do you do it !~ manager in amazement ‘‘Oh, it‘s quite simple, traveller, "quite simple. ried men all wipe their : mat ; the single men don desolate \ travelling sales agent visiting a large factory made a bet with the manager that he would pick out all the married men among the emâ€" salary } eent."‘ *i ‘"Oh vyoung A husband, a few week oneymoon, came home â€" the An egotist is a man who expects woman to marry him for himsel{ m honor. They believe in fair ideals # truth and unrealized nobilities of conduct. They do not delude themselves with the idea of immeâ€" diate perfection. They do not think that in the closing of an eye all these beliefs can flower into action. But the world has felt the possibiliâ€" ties of this life as never before, and it has faith in what it feels. ‘ There is nothing to hard and too high for the world toâ€"day to beâ€" lieve. Men believe in mirackes of selfâ€"sacrifice and selfâ€"abnegation. They believe in love, chastity and some day from out of the world. They believe that a way can be found whereby man can live at peace with his fellow man. They believe that no form of social amelioration is impossible. They believe that disease may largely be stamped out of the civilized world. They believe that the peoples . of the whole earth will ultimately learn the great lesson of self govâ€" ernment . n Men toâ€"day believe things too hard for the belief of earlier ages. They ‘believe that wars will cease before in the history of the world was there such faith in the ultimate improvement of â€" mankindâ€"such faith in the regenerative powers of man himself. A nation on its kneesâ€"a people at prayer! There is something treâ€" mendous, inspiring in the thought. Greater than the mental picture of armies going forth to war is this picture of a nation praying that war and rumors of war may cease. Truly this is the age of faith. Never NOTES ANDCOMMENTsSs n m it 11 ‘"06 s nothiing,"" oried the ride cheerily, "Che and advertising perfeot.}y?onb' it _down .25 per cent,"" _ _ en anc How He RKnows. Wrong Ideas TD U I} n W kind imph ntage \nimal ies men mM n ommeon w vilization the trut! eve id y xd wincing battlefi W west ord mJ Whil rare on with men « ation. But th truth under al r when it is t intage to do so m idm all things ind _ rum uish this r ment wn 15 n Ira ce asked ‘the tak where et al Tt The mar and wre nt only disillusio said the rDityV wit tor the said in attra ina ) sav n the 1M even the hard dare My per INniI i0ut ind peerâ€" | rIC all to it 1t th L1 N Brevity Appreciated. The young lawyer has been very lengthy in his closing speech of his | first real case, and noticing the | judge give evidences of his weariâ€" , ness, he said : ‘‘Your Honor, I shall | soon be through now, I trust L am | not trespassing too far on the time | and patience of the court." _ ‘"Young man," responded the | judge with a yawn, ‘"you long ago ceased to trespass on my time and patience. . You are now encroachâ€" mng on eternity." In n | _ But the gardener‘s wife smiled | and said, ‘"‘No, I think T‘ll try her | a day first, and see. I believe that |she will remember.‘‘ |_And she did. Mrs. Cluckstyâ€" | Cluck stayed right there in the corâ€" ‘ner of the yard by Blackâ€"Spot. And | she vrever â€" once «. wandered _ off | through the fields," although ~they | looked very inviting in the summer | sunshine. By the time Blackâ€"Spot‘s foot was ‘better, and she could walk about, the garden stuff had been gathered, and the nearâ€"by fields had been reaped, so Clucket=â€"Cluck was allowed to wanader with ‘her whole family wherever she wished. But, strangely enough, she seemed to have grown fonder of the old corner in the yard..â€"Youth‘s Comâ€" panion. & the water awhile, but when the garâ€" dener had done she began to peck away at the tether. Snip! went a thread, and Mrs. Clncketyâ€"Cluck was free. So Blackâ€" Spot began to ‘‘Peep, peep, peep !‘ in such an excited way that Mother Clucketyâ€"Cluck thought that someâ€" thing had come to hurt her Jlame child, so she ruffled up her fsathâ€" ers and gave a quick dart forward. Her foot seemed strangely light. In a moment she understood it all; Blackâ€"Spot had set her free! And just then the gardener and his wife came into the yard and saw what had happened. ‘‘You‘d better tie her up again ; she‘ll be away over the fields before night, with the whols family after her,‘"‘ the man said. On the barn floor she found deliâ€" \|cious grains of wheat, and then she ~ saw some oats scattered round a | | queerâ€"looking little object. _ She drew nearer. Snap! went someâ€" thing, and she felt a quick, sharp pain in her foot. She struggled and tried to get away, but her foot was caught fast! She was nearly wild with the pain and the fright! And all the time she could hear, out in that dear, delightful corner of the yard, her sister Clucketyâ€"Clucks, and their mother, clucking and peeping away so contentedly. Oh, if she were only with them! And at that she cried ‘"Weet! weet!""‘ at | the top of her voice. Mothe over and the sadd pox cut fre the top of her voice. "Well, well! If there isn‘t Blackâ€"Spot caught by the foot in that rat trap!‘‘ exclaimed the garâ€" dener, as he came through the doorway to see what all the ‘uss anyv doorw ay 1 was about in But Blackâ€"Spot seemed not to hear. Te "Be careful, dear, don‘t go far,"‘ clucked Mrs. Clucketyâ€"Cluck. But Blackâ€"Spot wandered on. "Beâ€" careful, dear. You must stay under mother‘s eye, for there are strange things in the big out side world that little: Cluckety Clucks don‘t understand." Mrs. Clucketyâ€"Clucks vainly tugged at her tether. ather lam id (C UC Mrs. Cluecketyâ€"Cluck was as black as a crow, but all the little Cluckâ€" etyâ€"Clucks were white, except one. That one had three or four little black spots on her (back. So the gardener called her Black Spot. One day when Mrs. Clucketyâ€" (Cluck and her family were pecking wbout in the yard, Blackâ€"Spot spied a big open barn door not far away. "‘That looks interesting, and I‘m getting tired of this little corner,‘"‘ thought Blackâ€"Spot. So she walkâ€" ed to the doorway. $ her What Blackâ€"Spot Did. Mrs. Clucketyâ€"Cluck was a great rambler ; with her big family of ten little Clucketyâ€"Clucks, she loved to wander through the fields and peck at garden stuff. For that reason, the gardener caught Mrs. Clucketyâ€" Cluck â€" and firmly tied four yards of heavy tape to one leg, and a big iron crowbar to the other end of the tape. The bar was too heavy for Mrs. Clucketyâ€"Cluck to move, so for many days she had to stay in the corner of the yard ; and since she could wander only as far as the: tether would allow her, the ten litâ€" tle â€"Cucketyâ€"Clucks stayed Witlhi same place. When the gardenâ€" came into the yard, Blackâ€"Spot ped pecking; but he had only e to fill Blackâ€"Spot‘s little dish i drinkingâ€"water. She sipped at water awhile, but when the garâ€" er had done she began to peck AV n â€" hurried to set Blackâ€"Spot She could not stand on her foot, which was bruised and So the gardener bandaged her s carefully as he could, carried nto a shady cornei of the yard placed her on some soft green women than men are leftâ€" In lucks came over _ and the saddest way. When ne into the yard, Mother luck ruffled _ up _ her d jumped about in front d jumpe rickâ€"Spot 21 lucketyâ€"Cluck _ came ‘ked and clucked in way, and the little ks came over and H in ti r, â€" Black re tether and peck w bits o in exacth ff uC ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO em neal m One of the greatfeatures of the present work has been executed with them by the extraordinary mobile fortresses. It is always easier to recognize the need of a rest cure than it is to put the cure into operation. First of all there is the difficulty of deciding just where and how to give it. Then it becomes necessary to persuade the patient to take it, and every restâ€"cure patient is a problem by himself, and usually a difficult one. It is quite possible to be in urgent need of the rest cure and at the same time to be more obstinate, vociferous, and unmanageable than all the rest of the family put toâ€" gether. That is why physicians adâ€" vise against attempting ‘the rest cure in the home. It is very likely to fail there in the case of the paâ€" tient, and to succeed only in makâ€" ing patients of the other members of the family ; for wornâ€"out people are hard to handle, although they tax the constitution and make chilâ€" dren more liable to disease during the winter. Autumn colds are parâ€" ticularly to ie guarded against, as these so often develop into chronic catarrh which is very hard to cure. The thin stockings and socks worn in summer should be eucceeded by ones that are slightly. warmer, while the same change should be made in the underwear. _ This should always be of wool, except during the ‘heat of the day. The colder evenings demand extra pre cautions in the putting on of warmâ€" er coats and wraps. I do uot mean that a child should be coddled, far from it, but a mother should see to the children having a light coat or cape which would prevent them catching cold. Woollen combinaâ€" tions of light weight are excellent for children‘s wear, and save many a serious illness. Children take cold more easily or less readily, but if well protected there is les_.s} liability to contract a severe mld.‘ Colds in children are best treated by keeping them in a warm, not stuffly atmosphere, and if possible, in bed. If a child is kept in practiâ€" caly the same atmosphere for three days, and a simple cough or cold mixture administered, the éold will generally disappear without leavyâ€" ing any serious effects behind. â€"A Physician. Care of Children in Autumn. Mothers® perhaps do not fully realize the necessity for taking particular care of children during the early autumn. A little extra care bestowed upon the child at this season will save many of the colds and troublesome ailments that ‘"Send me the men from the Southern Cross Eager to do their part; Send me my sons from the frozen north, Men of the mighty heart. (Give me the men from the sunâ€"baked veldt, Bred to the rifle‘s crack ; Send me alike both rich and poor ; No fear that men T‘ll lack ; Making one cause with my sons at home Warring on land or on salt sea foam, To fight for the Union Jack.‘" Hearken, yo whelps of the Lion, _ . Hear ye his arrogant cry ? ‘‘Where is there one to dare me, One who‘ll do battle and die? < Fear I the bear that was conquered, » Cowed by the small yellow man ? Heed I the squeaks of an upstart I ground in the dust of Sedan? Who talks to me of the Lion‘s sway ! A lion‘s cubs may be eagle‘s prey ! And mercy is none of my plan.‘" The Rest Cure. Hearken, ye whelps of the Lion, What says thy mother‘s roar t ‘Who is this Teuton boaster To prate so loud of war! Long have I stood his insults, . Long have I leashed my might But never brooked dishonored peace. The time has come to fight! Rise then ye whelps of the Lion‘s breed, Thy mother‘s call is the Empire‘s need And battle for the right ! Hearken, ye whelps of the Lion!.. ® 4 Stir ye, awake from your dream‘; , Hark to the worldâ€"flung challenge, f List to the eagle‘s scream : _ _ k Thrown in the tecth of the nations â€" Terrible; menacing ; grim : , Hear ye the words of defiance, P :. Hurled to the Empire‘s rim!? y £ ‘‘Stand from t& path of my southern mate. Stand aside lest ye be too late And I tear thee limb from limb." E HOMELAND‘S C;lLL. By Ronald McCaskill. â€"Maclean‘s Magazine, October, 1914 "W't‘”, I‘m g'?a.d to thought perhaps you you cou‘d get it from haven get it _ Embossed uwpon the belts of the German soldiers is the legend, "Gott mit uns‘ ("God With Us"). They are a virile and believing naâ€" tionâ€"such people make a terrible enemy. There is no place in the German mind for cynicism, which sometimes in older nations makes people woader whether the strugâ€" gle between national groups is good in the eves of God. The Germans are fighting like a band of brothers. In time of war the relations beâ€" tween class and class, between ofâ€" ficer and man lin the ranks, are close and cordialâ€"they are "comâ€" rades,"" a word continually on their lips as they fight. For their nation they are cold, inhuman, ‘barbaric.‘ That is why, if we believe that moâ€" ral laws govern this world, and that might is not right, we must fight them as we fought and conquered Napoleonism. But let us have noI delusions about «their real char-, acter. ; a mood of willing obedience to some one person, even if you have to perâ€" suade the doctor to play the ogre for that purpose. Let the meals be a succession of mildly exciting picâ€" nies. Admit one visitor a dayâ€"no moreâ€"as a concéssion and a treat. And if you can possibly find the money, have a professional massâ€" age the patient at regular intervals. Remember that an impatient, inâ€" tractable and _ thoroughly bored person lying in bed is not taking a rest cure.â€"Youth‘s Companion. But unfortunately, many people who need the rest cure cannot al ford to go to a sanatorium. It those cases, we must strive to atâ€" tain as far as possible the atmosâ€" phere and methods of the sanatorâ€" ium. Break the day up into periâ€" ods, and let them be punctually obâ€" served. Try to get the patient into _ That is the reason that a good sanatorium is the best solution of the problem. The patient is at once removed from his oversolicitâ€" ous family, and becomes simply one case among other casesâ€"although he may be tactfully recognized as a very ‘‘interesting‘‘ one. Furtherâ€" more, a life of gentle but inflexible rule and habit is established. The days glide by. and they are made to glide and not to drag, which is, perhaps, the most valuable secret of the system. ent war has been the various armis may be perfectly tractable and reasonable when they are in a state of health. Ged With Us" on German Belts. 1 wa t the 1 chap, I‘m in shocking it money badly and lsast idea where I can Strategy. the armored car combats, and s in the field. The photograph hsar that had an i me," ©a And departed ; and he went away and hanged himselfâ€"He is still pursued by the furies. As an evil spirit which ran hither and thither in the earth seeking rest and findâ€" ing none, so Judas was hurried by Into the sanctuaryâ€"The unclean money was even to defile the temâ€" ple, for it was thrown into the very holy of holies. What is that to us see thou to itâ€"The priests could not wash away the guilt of Judas. Had they been able to, they would not have been concerned with doing so. Let Judas stand the full brunt of his act. That was their thought. And they doubtless gloated over his disâ€" comfiture as much as they did over their good fortune when he came to them to say he would deliver Jesus in their hands. . 5. Cast down the pieces of silver â€"He could not hold them., They were searing his flesh. 4. Betrayedâ€"This word can alâ€" ways be rendered by "delivered up." The betrayal included the delivery. Repented himself, and brought back the thirty pisces of silver â€" He repented to the fullest extent: he brought back the â€" silver. But the silver no longer had aught to do with the betrayal, What was done could not be undone. The reâ€" pentance was genuine, even apart from the restoration of the money. 3. Then Judasâ€"That is, after Jesus was ied away to Pilate. As soon as Judas saw this he felt the doom of Jesus was complete. Who betrayed himâ€"Again â€"the stizma. Do that for which thou art come â€"The meaning is, "You have done that which you planned to do. I understand the meaning of the kiss." The Master saw quickly the parade and pretense of affecâ€" tion & 50. Jesus said unto him, Friendâ€" Jesus matches formality with forâ€" mality and calls Judas ‘"Friend." Hail, Rabbiâ€"At the last Judas cannot approach Jesus informally as his wont was. He comes with a formal greeting and designates him in a professional way. The kiss of affection under this approach was very thinly disguised. 49. And straightway he came â€" He would have the act over with immediately. If he hesitated, the influence of Jesus would control him. Under his control he could not betray him. Whomsoever I shall kissâ€"Lanâ€" guage fails one to describe the perâ€" fidy of Judas‘)s act. But to conâ€" ceive as its means of fulfillment the loving approach of a kiss stupiâ€" fies one. Gave them a sign â€" Some sign would be necessary in the dark, and especially because the officers of the chief priests and scribes could not be expected to know Jesus. 48. He that betrayed himâ€"Judas elsewhere is so designated (Matt. 10. 4 and other passages). The stigâ€" ma stuck to him. A great multitude with swords and stavesâ€"The indefiniteness of the <words ‘"great _ multitude‘"‘ leaves the imagination free to comâ€" pute the size of the crowd. That it was not small in number is clear ; ‘"‘staves and swords‘‘ also is an inâ€" definite term. It would suggest that the crowd was not composed of regular soldiery and was heteroâ€" geneously armed. That they came from the chief priests and elders of the people would indicate that the temple policy had been drawn into service. This would not be a large body in number and would naturâ€" ally draw a rabble with it as it proâ€" ceeded out into the night away from the city. Curiosity is always the concomitant of crime. Lesson IV. Jesus and Judasâ€"Matt. 26. 14â€"25, 47â€"503 27. 310. Golden J Text, Matt, 26; 24. ‘Verse 47. Lo, Judas, one of the twelveâ€"It was well known that Juâ€" das was one of the twelve. But even to the hardened bystander it was a shock to think of him as one of the disciples of Jesus and also as Jesus‘s betrayer. Hence the designation of Judas as ‘"‘one of the twelve‘‘ is not to describe or single im out.â€" It is an exclamation of surâ€" prise when he is found not with the other eleven and Jesus, bui in a turbulent crowd moving upon Jesus and the eleven. ‘ ThE SUNOAY sCHo0L LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESS.~, OcToBER 2. some very excellent shows one of these much money tl{;tvheâ€"(ea;"he-; ;f- Sord to be honest. whe mourns for theit‘i;riâ€"eetc-l.;mned soul of him Who planned the millionâ€"ki\} : They Whose souls Fhe mourns The Kaiser‘s motherâ€"rest soul !â€" Bhe hides her face in heaven . Bhe prays that she were the 3 chire maid , Or the widowed wife in Devon They mourn their dead With proudâ€"held head, pool lad ppSan / s In the Kaiser‘s millionâ€"kill It‘s the A'rtwelr’;’)’!’miai‘ on qst Who is ending his span With ? bloodâ€"choked prayer, if he will, As he P‘es by the side of the Livar. The Kaiser sits in an armoured train, Far back from the battleâ€"grip. It‘s the Liepzig boy and the Paris boy uit Riudba BB ctuavsiotc sc d dA is Who crouch where the bullets nip i arcs 4 cE n w It isn‘t the Uhlan battle thirst, It isn‘t the Belgian rage, It isn‘t the English greed for land That mires the recking stage, But the monstrous plan Of a Single Man With a worldâ€"engulfing will, Who calls to the vultures out 0‘ the north To feast on a millionâ€"kill. \»q planned the millionâ€"ki â€"Betty D. Thornley in Janada Monthly. corpse That keeps his cell for life ; But there‘s none will stand By the man who planned With a Pitâ€"perverted skill s To l(x’)j-nt the world with a German lsâ€"« At the price of a millionâ€"kill There‘s many a man in flaring hell For a single twist 0‘ the knife : There‘s many a rotting prison Once in a while a man has so _â€"9, 10. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken _ through Jereâ€" miah the prophetâ€"The words of the text which follow are not from Jeremiah, but from â€" Zechariah (chapter 11, verses 12, 13). The erâ€" ror is due to the fact, doubtless. that similar texts from â€" Jeremiah (18. 2, 3 and 32. 6â€"15) were in the writer‘s mind. The forcee of the parallel is not in the close similarâ€" ity of the incidents connected with the prophet on the one hand and Jesus on the other, but in the very low value set upon a prophet in either case. _ Prophetical insight and activity cannot be estimated. They run beyond all power of calâ€" culation. ‘The travesty in the beâ€" trayal of Jesus becomes accentuatâ€" ed when the low price set upon his head is considered. 6. And the chief priests took the pieces of silver, and said, It is not lawful to put them into the treasâ€" ury, since it is the price of bloodâ€" The word for "treasury‘‘ is corâ€" banas and means the _ ""sacred treasury.‘"‘ The _ exclusion _ of ‘‘blood money‘"‘ from this treasury was an application of the law against harlotry (see Deut. 23. 18). How true is it that Jesus was «counted with harlots and sinners. /. Bought .‘ . . the potter‘s field to bury strangers inâ€"Strange that this money should be so associated with death and burial. _ Strangers doubtless meant the Jews from other lands dying in Jerusalem at passover time. the lash of remorse until he is [ found hanging on a tree. It is supâ€" posed that he strangled â€" himself, the rope having broken. But see Acts 1. 18. in forgotten days ; that the machinâ€" ery and monuments, arts and sciences, comforts and beauties of Up From a Thousand Altars there goes to God the prayer to banish from the eanth "the grievâ€" ousness of war,‘‘ that men may not be slaughtered like herded beasts within the shambles ; that women may not be strinped of loved ones and left alone and desolate; that homes may not be destroyed or deâ€" spoiled, and the aged and the young, the sick and the enfeebled, scattered helpless before the winds of violence; that cultivated fields may not be laid wasteâ€"and inhabitâ€" ed places blasted like a desert ; that famine may not stalk the earth, pestilence walk in darkness and poverty beset the haunts of men, as ed unto God. Wars Have despoiled the earth before now ; Cassars At tillas and Napoleons have again and again achieved their dreadful handiwork.. But never before has a conflict been fought upon such‘ a stupendous scale, been armed with such monstrously effective weapons and threatened with ruin so high a stage of civilized development as this which is now raging throughâ€" out Europe. And therefore never before has the agony of men‘s souls been so intense and their prayers for deliverance so universal and sincere. _ Not merely here, â€" but everywhere throughout the earthâ€" not merely toâ€"day, but on every day that witnesses the supreme horror of ration lifting up sword again naâ€" tionâ€"not merely by us, who are far removed from fire and sword, but by sober men and stricken women in all lands now ravaged by desâ€" tructionâ€"is God besought, with one voice and one heart, "to vouchsafe His children peace." Never before in ‘the history of mankind have so many and such fervent prayers for peace been liit That Swords May B2 Beaten Into Ploughshares ; Spears Into Pruning Hooks PRA YERS FOR WORLD‘SPT : «n "On earth peace."â€"Luke ii., 14 by the side of the Liverâ€" are in God‘s will, CAINX. mother â€"rest her Yorkâ€" « ‘‘That‘s the pleasan puts it,"" her husband "As a matter of dact, of her cook." "My house is so w« said Mrs. de Graw, go into my kitchen 0o: ‘ Poekets,. Pockets will apparentiy ha place in autumn fashion. _A frock, with a short skirt and a ]overdreu that hangs straigh: the shoulders to below the ): shows two braided pockets on hips. The frock is banded lmuc‘h narrow silk braid. The» another model with _ interes pockets. It is made with a ; velvet bodice in Russian blon:s fect, ‘pleated below the loose w Over the pleats are stitched ’pockets. There is a short skirt and a long chiffon tunic, ed with a band of the satin. T is no touch of any other colo gray on the whole frock. Nilver Lace and Satin. A frock, in one piece, fast= in the back, is made with a b satin foundation with a three band of satin. There are long « fon sleeves and there is an ~» blouse of satin, cut so that it »~ «mooth and wrinkleless from bust and ends below the wai~ rounded outline. Silver cords re from the underarm seams toâ€" back of the waist. The straight © in ‘bodice suggests, in its lincs, coat of mail. There is a slich rounded neck line, finished ==~» little rolling collar, as high <~ as in front, of silver lace. Oneeâ€"piece Frock Fastened A black frock consists waistless bodice of at reaches to the hips and i1 the back with jet buttons is a band of jet embroid: the high round neck and tulle dlares upward. ‘| long tulle sleeves, full b elbow, with a band of veiw wrists and a frill of tulle hands. There is a sash al hips, with two ends held back under two big jet or! The skirt consists of a sat ation with a dong tulle tw dered â€" with three bands < velvet ribbon. One of the velvet skirt bottom. the satin. There tunic finished bead frings. Oneâ€"piece Fri In spite of the fact that taken the place of taffeta extent, taffeta ribbon s shown on# many evenin Especially for young won taffeta sash shown. Ther ly a huge bow at one sic front and very wide mbho Green Chifon and Mon! Green golfine, chiffon : key fur are combined in There is a foundation ski green silk golfine. There gathered tunic of green c} leaves exposed about fifte of the foundation skirt. is edged with a fringe fur. The long chiffon sle edged with monkey and : is composed of golfine » Fondly do we hope that wa work of all villainy and the « all ill, may speedily pass aw ay vently do we pray that peace, harmeth no man and brings measurable good to all, may . ily appear. Highly do we r to do all which may achiew, eoncord among men â€"and without which there can be n happiness nor true friendshiy any wholesome fruit of +o thought.‘"â€"Rey. _ John H Holmes. That deserts may bloom | rose and all waste places earth be glad ; that routes . and marts of business ; thronged, _ and prosperit within the borders of ever that science may be busy in boratories, philosophy voca halls of learning, and relig umphant in the temples 0 praise ; that the hearts of n be possessed of love, and i; ness and confidence learn +} laws and follow in the gent of brotherhood ; that God‘ dom may come and His will on earth as it is in Heaven a thousand years gone }, be â€"swept into oblivion ; ; gress _ toward â€" efficion, albundant and more just) buted wealth, truer po);; industrial Gemocracy, w !deeper knowledge, loftie, life, liberty and happi not be stayed for a thousa to come; that lust and ) not possess the souls of : usurp the place of reason governance of affairs, and ; violence of might dictate ] of human destiny ? Up from a million heart goes to God the prayer to ; earth the blessedness of pea people may dwell in sure 4 and The Awesâ€"inspiring Co xi the nc In Quiet Resting pPI Scealloped T ait n Sashes COs n ma hat he dwe land ways kingâ€" Vears may foree . the brute terms he and V not proâ€" more t on that ings nay tr May bie n id the epe at id war, and du; ::kq thui: ::i;;-tfimfl fng the war. S CCuE Uxflment's index nu! showing general level of ; At the end of Stp(emluy 18 ht compared with 135.5,. at ) “’,‘"- Most of the rise took ; d’*“ the first three weeks war u duung the past t "4., there has been a zo1 stcadiness in prices. Retail ; are reported to havre beon, on *“' steady in Beptember, : h “ upward movement {« .___lh WAr. In flour and : mitther advances occurred ..'"“’;l“d“ (dlfotho citics wnwards in -Ml‘., localities throughout : A despatch | The cost of liv jWbyuear “*l outbhreak _ . howi x g thowing ger At the end of | As compared wi Britain Contracts to Recei &A Week for a. YVoar, ‘w from Reading says : u frm on We W.Qlt.uct from the m for 50,000 stret Five Por Cent, ;;I‘I’I!l‘ in Canad Bince War Began. A despatch from Otiaw» The cost of living in Canada ha ‘m ‘, nearly 5 per cent. sinc ;“,n W 4 the war Th Yote of $50,000 Recomu: the City Council. A despatch from Monts For the relief of the fam '_‘Mfld uua ‘\.lllhw Cll’le "K‘] the followin card from Lord Kitcl« “M me to a the true sympathy 0( and the Queen in j« Kitchener .‘ FOR MONXNTREAL PArÂ¥PLOY Y3 NVote of m.mâ€";fl'mmm»ml-d i Alexander Carle Lo His 25th Birthd» A despatch from Mr. William Carlk Avenue, Montreal, from the British Gâ€" his son, Private V Carle, of the first | Guards, had been } in France. An addi tragedy was given h Private Carle had | Beptember _ 14, hi birthday. The offici: at â€" Campbell fared m > 8# w to "mlcr says: The ni launch Empress ] by Canadian aut Bpit, in Union B men and a wom name of Kohfec, custody. The la nine months‘ pr plies aboard, ca: ary T:flg‘ines,, and wire: apparat: that the crew : messages from t] at Cape Lazo. ° AISo The launch days ago with« * Albert commandos, organiz burgher line, which with regiments train« defence foree. Col cer appointed by Go take over the comma Lient,.â€"Col. Maritz, r of his patrols has en; Maritz‘s force at | taken 80 prisoners fhield cornets and served under Genera Bouth African War : his call, irrespective cal feeling, to fight British in defence « against which twel they were in arms had a marked eflect Mad About Nine Mon slons Aboard and V A despatch from Na: «a and commander the Union, is takin than he original!y General Botha is ; MoOxTREAL PRivy Duitch Commandos FVlook| Call of South African P A despatch from Cape I As a result of Col. Ma lion in the northâ€"west 0 FD\'iI_IOO.. Gen. Louis ] remier of the Union 0| 5 "Citipens, for abo half months the Be have been defending, at the price of hero fate of their countr; cortainly expocted to A â€" despaich fron eays : The prociama m‘ ‘nd annou! drawal of the Belgia to French soil was BOERS RALLY BUYS s0,.000 stRETCITERs “bh- e on Wednesday : Belg:an Legation Th follows : l VICIORY 0 GERMAX sPY 1 THE Cost or Livi~c ‘i-.-' Avlâ€"l-t';e ;'pv bu of Belgium Say His 4 was rece are to be f: ;/000 a week UXDER W wound 0A 1 supJ [PD

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