41 3 & « an Bwitzerland, the flï¬g of which white cross on a red ground. of compliment to him a Red ( Te n fauts nations as the symbol ‘of days about ment Man y and was anxtous about . his tie:; yet, after all, t real man, and the other w mask he wore. a mask of . th habits The to recogaize in a fherce and 1 warrior charging the guns the voung weon fight most most ancent of ecivilized . pe was but the day before yeste Need we then wonder that eve ter some 2,000 years of civilian eation the fighting man lies | beneath the thickest strata of tinuou=\v and laboriously aca the high nati the Uf all the ins human nature is ing instinet is th oldest, and all th enforced by educ: eustom are but « for the sake of the age of man u million years, the O00 vears the tw enthiusia=m m Ati hundreds of milllons in order CNa&l financial speculations may be made by the promoiers and gamboling synâ€" dicates, with the backing of Fig armies ard navics. This may not the NOTES A! Russia has had a series of prosâ€" perous yeats which â€"writers on world politics are celebrating a» it the sole chjec of prodnction were war, There has beea a remarkable growth in the ordinary revenues of the country, but revenue, of course, implies taxation, and a large part of what is taken out of production by taxation is going to the military account. From 1907 to 1913 the miliâ€" tary and naval expenditures inâ€" ereased by _ nearly _ $170,000,000. Moreover, it is said that the annual expenditures henceforward whould exceed one hundred million pounds, which is but little less than #500,â€" OO OOK). peopie D armies al ren « promotion of the exp The industrial classes hundreds of millions financial speculations be far from n Another authority on world poliâ€" ties questions the gain to be derivâ€" ed from seizing occupied lands and the people who own them. He does not see how long the citizens o6 the conquering nation are benefited by the extension of their country‘s boundaries. They do not take the lands and the congquered people do not become their slaves. But it seems that there is a diplomacy which stands behind the exporter of capital and "the struggle for a balâ€" ance of power has ite motive and its impetus largely in this singular modern relationship between the state and finance.‘" A P We n Cw inde EP t i0 it W Originator of the FHE FIGNHTING IPNSTINCT War, then, is an agen omotion of the export vent rb \ all the instincts with which an nature is endowed the fightâ€" instinct is the keenest and the «t,. and all the habits taught or reed by education, by law or by om are but curbs upon it. _ If, the sake of argument, we put age of man upon the earth at a on years, then for at least 990,â€" years the two great instinctsâ€" fighting and the socialâ€"were rously selected. It was the ers, in bands, clans, tribes or omns, who lived to tell the tale, hest and the bravest of the warâ€" races who survived to carry on race. _ Compared with these is ©[ evolution during which the iow instinct was selected the a ppare th it brethren ia sn . The _ hard : of one industrial nati in common with their another â€" industrial ust ol Battle Lies Rocts of Our Nature 1€ - Nightingale, Dunant| he movement unofficially in | the time of the .\ustro-i »mattle of Solferino, when he | wn. because of his dress.! man in white." In his old fell into poverty, but thel f the Nobel Peace Prize d the passage of his last Dunant was a native . of and, the flag of which is a oss on a red ground. Out iiment to him a Red Cross ght ANX pi H ncic and read the Red he y 1ave LN onl :d nde; nta mditions and reve It has ts L NY NDCOMMENTS t1 a mas midity 1€ eason why ites f a Wrflk or so sixâ€"andâ€"eightp s about the s nternationat moveâ€" Dunant, who died ago‘ Greatly inâ€" avers to a irenzy ol The â€" hardâ€"working mA H truth L Y U civilized â€" peri before vesterd xample of two zabeth Erv and boundar the ffhand intrie Red Cross. vcd 0 bé by th chosen women or of capital. ay taxes n order that it the so â€"readily cause â€" he N rCqul is anâ€" m vears may not there is t should « i these it ho w moters (“p!n isplace ut n have nation n eduâ€" itent conâ€" M 1A V€ a & by this neg d y af in | _ An American girl was taking a | Liverpool girl home to the States " with her, and towards the end of .the journey remarked: "It is â€" deâ€" | lightful to feel that one is so near home. We ought toâ€"sight> Sandy Hook this afternoon," _ ‘Shall we?" exclaimed her friend. "That will be nice, Don‘t tell me which he is,I can always pick a Scotsman ‘So that when the faithful drinks absinthe, at the first glass his appeâ€" tite awakes, and he arises, proud as a peaeock; at the second glass he becomes excited â€" and _ gesticulates like a monkey : at the third he beâ€" comes quarrelsome and spiteful like a bear; at the fourth he becomes besotted and falls to the earth like a hog in the mire." bear juice pig. An old Moor sarml of absinthe: "It is an invention of the evil one. On its roots he pours the blood of a peacock; then .when the leaves begin to grow, he sprinkles them with the blood of a monkey : then he dips the stalks in the blood of a bear; lastly, he mingles with the juice of the plant the blood of a Heâ€"What would you s aisked you to be my wife 1 Sheâ€"As little as possible In the End the When the disease is very infecâ€" tious take the side of the patient which is very near to the window. Do not eniter the room the first thing in the morning before it has been aired, and when you come away take some food, change your clothes, and expose them to the air for some days. bathe them in c has been added deâ€"Cologne, and a féew weeks yvou empt are \ it you are a victim of any stomâ€" achic trouble where there is lack of gastric juice, eat huckle@berries in every form you can deovise from soup to wines and jellies, putting them through a sieve to eliminate the needs if necessary. beneit pentine Do n fatigue spirati U Convulsions are apasmodic musâ€" cular â€" contractions" of ‘the body. quite beyond the control of the perâ€" son who suffers from them. When they occur in adults, especially if they occur habitually, they are genâ€" erally caused by epilepsy, although many diseases may have convul)â€" sions among their symptoms. The very commones® form of convulsion, however, occurs in babies and very young children. These coavulsions generally appear durming ‘the first two years of life, and disappear afâ€" ter the child is five or six yvears old â€"unlees they are owing to epilepey. In that case, they will probably continue as long as life lasts, ard grow worse year by year. Epileptic convulsions, however, weva‘lly appear later in ie ; and alâ€" most all the attacks that occur in beabyhood are the result of rickets, which is, in turn, caused by improâ€" per feeding or by some local {rritaâ€" tion. m If k ei ABSINTHE DEFIXED. Infantile Convnlsions. ment tic patients derive much they are rubbed with turâ€" 1 a warm room. visit the sick when you are or when in a state of perâ€" or with the" stomach 1 the User Becomes Like Pig. Said Moor. M Health Notes U en In & St with the sueh cond No. take is very infecâ€" of the patient to the window. room the first nditions savy if I you infecâ€" abbas to Jesus. 22. What then shall I do unto Jeâ€" sus who is called Christ!â€"Pilate had tried hard to escape passing judgment on Jesus. He was on Pilate‘s hands and Pilate knew not what to do with him. The plight of this Roman official is truly pitiable. 23. Why, what evil hath he done? â€"The ‘why‘‘ is an exclamation of surprise, â€" Pilate could not underâ€" stand why the Jews wanted to kill 20. Now the chief priests and elders persuaded the multitudesâ€" In spite of the fact that Jesus stood alone and. unrepresented, much persuading evidently was necessary t t th _qm}ri‘tude to prefer Barâ€" ;{)BB; &3e§fl . 17. Whom will ye that I releasse| Never soared so high again. unto you? Barabbas, or Jesus!â€"| Pilate undoubtedly thought J(.S!,\" Bl}l (hte l.virdl witfh a blioken pinion was a popular favorite andâ€" that| , KePL another from the snare, when the (]‘I‘u\\'d was given a choice, i And tvhe life that sin had slrlc.ken they nould thonne Meones Cheaue: | . eared atomer, from mestalth which is called ('hrna!'? â€"Pilate unâ€" ‘ There‘s healing for every pai[;,i, d(‘rst«qnl the word King as J_esus \ But the bird with a broken pinion used it, hence the term ‘"Christ." Never soars so high again. In spite of his shortsightedness otherwise, he could see thr»[{ghIBllt the soul that trusts in Jesus the Jews (18‘, and refused to let the | Is saved from every sin, issue against Jesus be confused. img’m:fleahf:or\t nthna:'tgfllgg iwl"il:lsm fhas 19. His wife sent unto himâ€"The $ o incldent tof Pilate‘s wife. is histori |" o ae hos S TNo Seae arope cally doubted. Why, is not clear.| y the grace which he freely giveth The wives of Roman provincial govâ€"| ‘you shall higher soar again. ernors were privileged to accomâ€"| â€"M. Butterworth. Last verse by P.B pany their husbands to the pro‘i ho io ie nR t s ts vinces (Tacitus, Annals HL, 33â€"| eavgs & § 34); so her presence is probable.| pPorXTED PARAGRAPH®S. Being present, she would have been | o â€".. $ greatly stirred by the arrest n | _ In a manner of speaking. the denâ€" trial of Jesus, for even in the inner | USt !s 4 dealer in extracts. household of the governor Jesus The only nse some. men seen tCc was known as a righteous man. Her; I"“:c for heads is to butt in. reference ‘to himâ€"as that tightcons Gems of thought never were nor man shows well how he was known.| “"'! be a drug on the market . She knew her husband better than: , Never despise little things. . The he himself and feared he would not| »!88¢8t. man that ever lived was be equal to the wiles of the Jewish| °C° *", infant. leaders. | â€"Once in about 7,000 years a man tude one prisoner, whom â€" they wouldâ€"The governors of Rome had had sufficient knowlédge of the Jewish tenacity to know that it was best not to cross them if there was no absolute necessity for so doing. Hence they had accustomed themâ€" selves to make certain concessions, such as the releasing of a prisoner at the time of passover. 16. _A notable prisoner called Barabbasâ€"The original has Bar abban.‘ If the spelling were Bar rabban the phrase wou‘!d mean ‘‘son of a rabbi.‘". Bar abban is the acâ€" cusative of Bar abbas and means ‘"‘son of a father." Some of the church fathers held ‘to the former interpretation. Jerome called Barâ€" abbas filins magistris, "‘son of a master,"‘â€" or teacher. This man Barabbas was notable at least on account of his father, 17. Whom will ve that I release 18. Hearest thou not how many things they witness against thee !â€" The leaders and the multitude were unbridled in their speech. They were making whatsoever accusaâ€" tions against Jesus happened to come into their minds. 14. Insomuch that the governor marveled greatlyâ€"The accusations against Jesus evidently were so irrelevant and immaterial that Piâ€" late supposed a word or two from Jesus would clear him. He did not know the perverseness of the leadâ€" ers, as Jesus did, and hence could not appreciate the wisdont of Jesus‘ silence. 15. Now at the feast the governor was wont to release â€"unto the multiâ€" Text, Matt. 27. 22. Verse 11. Art thou the King of the Jews !â€"Jesus had called himself the "Christ,"" not the "King" of the Jews. The Jews accuse him to Pilate as wanting to be the King of the Jews so as to make a political affront and the more readily catch Pilate‘s ear. Jesus is ready, howâ€" ever, to admit that King and Christ are essentially the same. He was a ‘‘King," but not of this world. See John 18. 33â€"37. 12. He answered nothingâ€"To Piâ€" late Jesus spoke at length (see again John 18. 38â€"37); but to the chief priests and elders, he was silent. It was really beneath his dignity togspeak to them. However, his silence was due to the absolute useâ€" lessness of his speaking. TH; SUXOAY SCR3IOL (FS301 esson â€"Â¥liL.e Joesus and Pilate. Mait. 27. 11â€"31. tGolden INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOVEMBER 22. Ruins Caused by German Artillery ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO on the platform, "I believe I‘ve opened my head!" "Well now‘s the time to put something into it," was Pat‘s witty, reply, Real faith is needed before a man can buy a bottle of hair restorer of a baldâ€"headed druggist. # A porter in London was engaged in cleaning a luggage van when the door swung back, striking him vioâ€" lently on the head. "Oh, Pat," he exclaimed to an Irishman standipg The man who makes good doesn‘t wait for opportunity to knock. He has the door wide open. Once in about 7,000 years a man manages to hit the mark when he shoots off his mouth. In a manner of speaking, the denâ€" tist is a dealer in extracts. The only use some men seem to have for heads is to butt in. Gems of thought never were nor will be a drug on the market. Never despise little things. The biggest man that ever lived was once an infant. In a m tist is a The on l‘a\"c for Gems ¢ But the soul that trusts in Jesus Is saved from every sin, And the heart that fully trusts him Shall a crown of glory win: Then come to the dear Redeemer, HMe‘ll cleanse you from every stain By the grace which he freely giveth But the bird with a broken pinion Kept another from the snare, And the life that sin had, stricken Saved another from despair; Each loss has its compensation, There‘s healing for every painâ€" But the bird with a broken pinion Never soars so high again. I saw a young life broken By sin‘s seductive art, And, touched with a tender pity, I took him to my heart; He lived with a noble purpose, And struggled not in vainâ€" But the bird with a broken pinion Never soared so high again. I walked through the woodland mea dows, f Where sweet the thrushes sing, And found on a bed of mosses A bird with a broken wing; 1 bound up its wound, and each morn: ing It sang its old sweet refrainâ€" But the bird with a broken pinion Never soared so high again. 25. His blood be upon us and on our childrenâ€"They were brave, in the safety of the multitude. They really did not know what they were doing. They were mobâ€"mad. Later on in the quietness of sober reflecâ€" tion many of them repented and would â€" gladly have undone what they did. 27â€"31) had their usual chancee at! mocking and scourging â€"the conâ€"| demned man. That he ‘was the‘ Prince of Life was a fact which, if! at all known to them,. was knu\\'n| in raillery. | 26. Jesus he scourgedâ€"It would seem that to deliver Jesus up for erucifixion would have sufficed. The "scourging‘‘ was a barbarous pracâ€" tice among the Romans from which Jesus was not to be exempt. ~The Roman soldiers (as we see in verses 24. When Pilate saw that he preâ€" vailed nothingâ€"He was powerless. On another occasion a Jewish mob stood its ground against a Roman governor to his discomfiture. _ Piâ€" late evidently knew this and wanted no unfavorable report of his adminâ€" istration, in this instance, to go back to Kome. His attempts to persuade the crowd in favor of Jeâ€"| sus only raised a tumult. Took| water and washed his hands before the multitudeâ€"This was a Jewish custom which the Jews would unâ€"| derstand. The leaders of the Jews,| at least, also understood how comâ€"| pletely Pilate was undone in the, doing of this act. 1 am innocent of | the blood of this righteous man ; see ye to itâ€"In his extremity Pilate | remembered the advice of his wife. | It was good advice. He wanted| nothing to do with the execution of Jesus. | ingly, saying, Let him be crucified â€"They make no attempt to answer Pilate‘s question. They knew of no evil Jesus had done. They are not concerned about this aspect of the matter. They are bent on carrying their point. To stop to answer quesâ€" tions would have thrown them into confusion. Jesus. But they cried out exceed BEIRD WITH A BROKEN WING at Boore, France. | 4. The breath from the lungs conâ€" ]tains foul organic maiter, which beâ€" | comes poisonous _ if _ rebreathed. !Hem-o the air of living and sleepâ€" ing _ rooms, _ workshops, â€" schgols, !churches and public vehicles should | be quickly changed, otherwise perâ€" |sons breathing it become weakened, and thus may become predisposed | to consumption. |_ 5.. Overcrowding is both dangerâ€" [ ous and injurious to health, and | should be avoided. _ 6. â€"Windows should be made to iup«n to the external air, they | should be kept open day and night | sufficiently to provide for a continâ€" | uous supply of fresh air, but inâ€" \ jurious draughts should be avoided. 1. Consumption is contracted by taking into the system, chiefly through inhalation, the germ or microbe of the disease. . 15. All cases of tuberculosis must within 12 hours be notified by the physician in charge to the Medical Officer .of . Health. Regulation 1, Tuberculosis. 14. The extent to which outdoor exercise and fresh airshould be inâ€" dulged in should be regulated by the physician in charge, as also the character of clothing to be worn and the daily dietary, 9. Al rooms shou‘!d be kept clean, otherwise the air can never be pure. Cleanliness and good sanitary surâ€" roundings are essential for the preâ€" vention as well as the cure of the disease. 10. To protect against the germs of tuberculosis, as foued in boh meat and milk, these articles of diet should be subjected to a temâ€" perature of at least 180 degrees F. (60 C.).. The former should be well cooked through and the laiter shou‘!d be heated to at least 140 de grees F. for 25 minutes. 11. All bed linen and bodyv linen should be disinfected before being sent to the wash. 12. The elothing. wearing appaâ€" re! and other effects of a consumpâ€" tive should either be destroyed ar disinfected by superheated â€"steam before being used by another. 13. Never put cormms, articles of the toilet or other «rail objects in your mouth. Do not use a pipe, wind _ instrumert or implement which goes to the mouth that has be‘e‘n in use by any other person. _ 7. Open spages around buildings are necessary for the access of fresh air. «doors, Ihis rule applues equally to churches, school rooms, factorâ€" ies, hotels, public halls, as well as to the homes of consumptives. 8. â€" Rooms, staircases and pas sages should be frequently flushed with air by opening windows and doors,. This rule applies equally to churches. school rooms. factorâ€" Precautions Issued By Ontario Proâ€" vincial Board of Health, 4 1. The special measures required | lor producing conditions destructive | to the virulence of tubercle bacilli| which may have found lodgment in | a house are, fortunately, those best | calculated to preserve and improve | the health of the inmates. | 2. These are air, light, sunshim-.j and dryness, which, while they aid ; in revdsring individuals able to reâ€"| sist the establishment of the germ‘ of the disease, at the same t‘me are| most destructive to its vitality. | 3. Ventilation by means of fresh| air is most important for the preâ€"| servation of the health of children,| as well as adults, fresh air preventâ€" l ing the development and spread of consumption, â€" Ventilation is essenâ€"| tial in factories, workshops, offices| and houses, particularly whea the air of such places is associated with gaseous fumes and fine dust. Just then Betity‘s mother came out into the garden, carrying a dish of ice cream. "Well," cried Bobby Jackson, ‘"‘the one who made that ice cream knew how good red and green look with white "‘â€"Youth‘s Companion. HOW TO AYOID CONSUMPTION. ‘"Wouldn‘t the gr;en show if'the sun didn‘t shine ?"‘ Bobby questionâ€" ed. "No," Aunt Fanny answered. "The light of the sun is necessary. I‘ll tell you how you can have some fun at home. Find a red, a blue, and a yellow book, and place them, one at a time, in the sun on a piece of white paper. Then ask your father what color you are going to show him, and see if he can tell you."‘ "The sun likes ®%o° play s tricks," Aunt Fanny explained 2. This germ is contained sï¬ Personal Precautions. jeast 140 deâ€" E And, seeing the vision, we try to +‘8, | make other people see it. We plead d hodv linen |and we preach. We explain and we before being : interpret. We give money, time and [strength unstintingly. For a time, earing appaâ€"! perhaps, we make progress. Then [ a consumpâ€"| comes reactionâ€" destroyed or | _A Worse Condition Than Before, catei ~ steam! . :; ..%," > i. 4 * hi. i‘ COURAGE AND SACRIFICE such aged by this slow prog \Here Is a Truth to Be Established, a Wrong to Be | ed, a Right to Be Achieved |_â€"9, Kissing by consumptives shou!d be prohibited. Whea coughing, : consumptive patient should alwa» hoid a handkerchief in front of th mouth, and should avoid coughi+ in the direction of another person. i 10. The greatest care should be taken to prevenrt the smearing of hands, face, clothing and bedâ€" clothes with the sputa. Should an accident of the kind happen, the parts should be immediately cleansâ€" ed, and for this reason the clothing and wearing apparel of consumpâ€" }ti\'es should be thoroughly disinâ€" {fected before being used by others. | 11. A consumptive should not hold |a situation in which he is required \to handle the food or wearing ap parel of others. 12. A room occupied by a conâ€" sumptive should not be swept or | dusted. _ Such few floor rugs as are used should be frequently taken up ‘and exposed to the sunlight, and ;nlsu disinfected at interval«. They should on no account be shaken, beaten or swept. In cleaning such | reoms wet cloths must be used to wipe the floor, woodwork, windows, t furniture, etec., and thess cloths | should be frequently boiled. . These | rooms should be thoroughly cleansâ€" |ed at least once a month, in addiâ€" |tion to the daily cleaning. |_ 13. On a room being vacated by a | consumptive, it should be thorough (ly and completely disinfected. The | wall paper (if any) should be reâ€" [ moved, and the walls, ceiling and \fMloor well washed with a dlisinfect ing solution and well aired. ‘ 14. Special sets of spoons, forks,. tknives, plates, cups, etc.. should be (kept for the exclusive use of each |person affected, and these articles lshuul-d be placed for a few minutes in _ boiling water before being | washed. No burden heavier to be hurnvl meets the brave prophet of the betâ€" ter day than â€"that of the slow proâ€"| gress of his cause; no fact hardvr! to accept, as John Morley puts it. | than that of "the vast space \\'lli(~‘|, every ray of light has to traverse | before it reaches theâ€"eye of the comâ€" mon _ understanding.""__ Here _ is ’ something which we know by some | intuition of the spirit is needed by | the race for its greater security and | happiness. The vision to us is clear. | 16. All cases of Tubercul within 12 hours be notifie physician in charge to the Officer of Health. _ Regu Tuberculosis. ‘‘The thiog was true, but the time appointed was long."‘~â€"Daniel Oceasionally a man has. a soft spot in his heart, but more often in his head. 15. Milk and cther artie should not be permitted t« the bedroom of a consump should be brought to hin such quantities as are rec immediate use. 6. A consumptive should not spit into a handkerchief, but, if not proâ€" vided with spittoon, should use a piece of clotle or paper, which should be burned at the first opporâ€" tunity. 7. Handkerchiefs, which â€" may have been used, should be boiled oneâ€"half hour before being washed. 4. The consumptive must not exâ€" pectorate anywln)ore exceptâ€" in a spittoon kept for the purpose, which spittooa should contain waâ€" ter, to which a disinfectant has been added, preferably a 5 per cent. soluâ€" tion of carbolic acid, which is preâ€" pared by dissolving one ounce of carbolic acid in one imperial pint of hot water. 5. When absent from his own room, the consumptive shou‘d use a small, wideâ€"mouthed bottle, with a carefully fitting: cap (pocket spitâ€" toon), the contents of which when emptied should be destroyed ard the receptacle carefully cleansed, being kept in boiling water for at least ten minutes. Ei FEReh L. m oo c e on 1 haled direct‘y through the air. When the spuatum aad dropl=ts be come dry they miagle with the dust, and, being in-huleï¬ with it, iatroâ€" duce the germs into the body, or the narms. max _ be inhaléd directly 3. Thes consumptive _ person, therefore, must not expectorate about the house or on the floor of any public building, cab, street car, railway carriage or other conveyâ€" ance, nor on the street or .other public place. .putu&or spit of the consumptive, and : minute droplets which he sprays into the air in coughing or susezing. The germs may be inâ€" heltsd Brsnt!v ; ibrougch the ‘fAir. gorins. may . D through the air to him in are require notified by ‘the to the Medical Regulation 1. 08 b_Cannos in their ious day have we VC reform â€" »f diet and in muast they unl,\' The True Proph: grapples with falsshood deep rooted in the soil of and bigotry. hurls hims wrongs that are bulwark fortress of prejudice a~ battles ‘against spiritus ness in high places." ‘ a~ enough, his viectory is : of toâ€"day, but # the d morrow. The Time ap long, as Daniel well sa» because the time is |on« prophet have reason the thing for which dies is true ! Tho real servant > T} eve Al is certain; but it is als that, if he be a true love never yield. On the cont: difficulty of his task will to confirm his faith and his determination. He w‘ clearness that the greator ance of men and the mos ent their indifference the gent the necessity for his all the world were reads the new message there \ no particular need for its The cause which can be w is not worth fighting for and sacrifhice are needs teach traths already k back reforms already : but to teach truths wh not hear and to back r they will not espouse. morai people thai they s their neighbors good. O have to make good â€"m; my duty to my neighb« more> nearly expressed that 1 have to make hin I mavy.â€"R. 1.. Stevenson The â€"average girl time for her kin until married and has litt her own. Theré has be: than a cern‘tary has entered on s belief that the ac ~â€"Viscount Bryce. Many have po about the origin « there is evil, an« way to escape it :. gin and end.â€" Joh Justice is itself 1 policy of civil soci nent departure f1 circumstance, lies cion of hbeing no Burke. If a man be gr ous to strangers citizen of the w heart is no island lands, but a cont them.â€"Bacon. grateful for it.â€"Arnold Expenditure is neces protection of those wh tably inclined and son led.â€"Mr. Pearce Camp We are not going t« we â€" have _ smashed t\ Army, the German Na spirit of German milit: Grev. It is only th a kindness wh grateful for it. vit would reign suprem« Even broadtail cloth «« he enormously wide gird The military coat has Graiding and barre! but A lovely evening gown i cerystal net over whit> sa Bome of the serge dre eape collars and tumc sk Children are _ wearin skirts with solid color ja WO Beaded and are favored for t Long fur capes are a now i Andigo blue sable cloth i« ; demand. Tucked net waisis and c0) coming in. Circular skirts are 1 long coats. The sway of the sash is unbounded. Black gloves are more seen than formerly. A lovely bronze gree the favorite shades. Homespuns and tweed style for the young. Quiet, soft colors are | in vogue for winter, Fox collars are gen« ing wraps. Little girls‘ cape coa ing and practical. LC If Phere THOUGHTS sumel:.me, & These thing Jchn Hay: L4 Fads and Fancies s an jGena a ple that they but ntin« meta POR TH+ DA d 14 iph na One A 1 To Visit Indians * h from P. A mlcvnnn! ‘ ceived here of the en .“.l transport Prut) sank soone; der her to the Turkis}) h' whn called uy fer her captain hca. . ;, _"* _ Capt for 11 1he shore, shlp Went Down ¢ SOONER THA» boy Beveral Living No: te Fm‘ with o A«Mh fl\:m ]’r4 Bays: Fear that <| m.‘b dinm had spr that in the absence of ¢: mation “’le loss of the » now "officially presum, dllpl 7iâ€"‘lâ€":. “M:n v'n' » ‘ 42 officers. The cap Hope was Philip 1 captain of the Monm §nndt The Admi: Rearâ€"Admira) Sir d_opk, commande; A despatc} The Admira) 0'_ 52 officers with the crui despatch f Marsha] German Lloyd â€" hl.l “!‘ Gr. stroyed early in :| tish cruiser High# Elfl)lc. have made tch steamer, « men, The men ha a German steame hl‘bo_r at Las Pa A despatch i fl:Ph Compan as Palmas. ( Ten Officers of the h Break Pa SPREADPS To cunn; A hié'i:.\tlil‘(: _ ieut, Rag attempting t« od . Acoomenjc-d Paget, La y Ra [ngwil |flarcnurl lospital Commit sonal suite, the don and remaine for more than + were passed in vi talking to the pat buting among th sents of pgx‘n. shir warm muflhiers. A despatch i Queen Mary pa ton, in Devons«! Claddeoned BHears , Gifts of Pij Clothin QUEE® PAJD V| TO WOUNDE: course in a rapidly acro escape thro Carpathans Of ©eoâ€"0pera. in a withdr COzenstochow were ab Austrial army , eia has been ca Russian armics 1 or accept cerian The suppos t o imperi'od force Gen, Dank!, whi Vistula from 11 Alexandra afto; Austroâ€"Germs A despatch from 1 is reporied from P~ Pshal Lord ° R. h.â€llg to Fra Founcement ma Gen. Dank!‘s Force Wards Hu E8SCAPED ARMY OF 2: 0# Monmouth opened fron in an ai across W JOWIN 31M Sang the M ar Infe Nore M f7 PIRVE M I‘h