of @0 #} Mr. Newlywedâ€"Did you sew the button on my coat, darling ? Mrs. Newlywedâ€"No, love; I covidn‘t find the button, and so I just sewed up the buttonhole. lust how it has proof of such achievements, Le Matin.does not say. but it adds that General Leo, of the Reigian army, and two Cabâ€" inet â€" Ministers, have personally gone to Cherbourg to congratulate Sopin, who is not _ dangerously wounded. "i hear the sea captain is in hard lock. He married a girl and she ran away from him.‘" ‘"Yes; he took her for a mate, but she was a ï¬â€.l’.†a First, during the siege of Liege, Sapin was in the fort of Loncin. CUlimbing a tree, and concealed by its leaves, he killed an entire batâ€" tery of heavy artillery, said to numâ€" ber 42 men. It is claimed that the sommanding officer of this battery reached the foot of the tree, revolâ€" ver in hand, only to fall, as the rest had fallen, from a bullet sent out of Sapin‘s rifle. Second, two weeks later he perâ€" senally capitured the flag of a regiâ€" ment of Hussars, whose Colonel he No Beigian soldier is receiving wore acclaim in the French press than Emile Sapin, who, at the age ol 22, has received the decoration of the Order of Leopold and the cross of the Legion of Honor. Le Matin. ol Paris, confesses it could not beâ€" lieve all the brilliant exploits atâ€" tributed to this young man, who was a private when war was deâ€" clared, and who was made a Corâ€" poral onaly a month ago, but that it has investigated through inquiries not only of Sapin himself, who is now in Cherbourg hospital, but also ol many others, and it cheerfully recognizes the folhowing achieveâ€" ments : BELi@GHAX SOLPIER LIONIZED. kmile Sapin Has a Great Record of Hersic Acts. W1 W TY Tl WJ W 18 solated and the dying. One of the earliesi despatches reports fighting at Gaza. ~It will be recalled that Samson carried off the gates of this city. Turkish trdops have mobilizâ€" ed around the Gulf of Akaba â€" and the Sinai peninsuwla. Over this same ground more than 3,000 years ago the same great prophect Moses led the children of Israel. Turkish troops have been reported as conâ€" centrated at Mosul on the Tigris, which is across the river from anâ€" tress anad the Holy Fe hird, near Louvain, sent out in ompany of six men, Sapin sucâ€" ded in capturing 49 soldiers, inâ€" ding ome officer. . The entrance of Turkey into the war means onee more the bloodâ€" stained soil of the Holy Land will send to heaven the cries of the® deâ€" NOTES ANDCOMMENTs W And the foe be ten to oneâ€" L‘é ough our only reward be the thrust of the sword, } And a bullet in heart or brain. | ca hat matters one gone if the flag sh floats on, ; ev And Britain be lord of the main. ma t} THE COLORS OF THE FLAG d the fe h A & U dauntless tre; pests dread guardian ships C us d The Helpmect. d the neveh n h in the Holy City itself the 60,000 Jews in Jerusa 1as been widespread dis‘ _ devastation throughout Land caused by the wholeâ€" UD ription of all men, Chrisâ€" Moslems alike, between f eighteen and fortyâ€"two. m white on oi of cur land. in our sigl unt blue in our flag, boys* of the boundless sea, ssels ride in their tame de d Amer the f the winds are free; d smiles of the coral ind irvat nist al sufterer D d AN id L the d It L them m have bta m th h and north, through tem: rcle special exâ€" in funds to said that ese Jewish but _ relief iman prom fNlag th AFS th ‘ave been m€ M alestin« LnV remit bov M ive W w h ved ind ind UA 1 T _ Mulliganâ€"He‘s the shly knows nobody can fighi pounds. Fury of Attack Has Pitiable Effect on the Germans. It is a tradition of the Indian army that Highlanders and Gurkâ€" has work together. Here is a deâ€" scription of a charge by the Highâ€" landers, which, in spite of the unâ€" Ainching heroism, might have failâ€" ed but for the timely intervention of the terrible kukris of Gurkhas The Highland regiment was sent forward to carry a line of hostile trenches, but their heroic charge was checked by a murderous fire and barbed wire entanglements on which they stumbled. Between the gaps in their ranks slipped‘* the Gurkhas. They insinuated themâ€" selves like cats between and under the barbed wire. Their kukris on their left hand disappeared in the enemy‘s trenches, then trose a terâ€" rivle mediey of cries, the harsh batâ€" tle cry of the attackers and the groan or scream of the attacked, as the terrible knife went howe. In the tumult of carnage the c +mâ€" mands of German officers _ who sought to rally their men were lost. In the mud and slime of â€" the trenches a terrible struggle, handâ€" toâ€"hand _ and bodyâ€"toâ€"body, was proceeding. The end came quickly. In a mad frenzy of fear the Gerâ€" mans broke and ran, throwing their rifles from them and blundering into their own wire entanglements. Such prisoners as were taken bore in their eyes a nameless terror. For hours after they were brought into the British lines taey trembled conâ€" stantly. The terror of that charge deprived them of the power of voliâ€" tion, and almost of the mower of motion. GURKHA® PARALYZE EXEMY between them. It is possible for that to be the case, although the teeth themselves show no sign of disease. It can even hanven to the most cleanly people, for the brush, even when conscientiously used, will not reach the affected spot. If neglected, the condition is sure to lead to trouble, because the patient constantly swalâ€" lows the poisons that are formed, to the detriment of his digestion and his «eneral health. â€"Youth‘s Companion. n O‘Brienâ€"Clancy‘s married a woâ€" an that weighs three chundred Bleeding gums are one of the signs of scurvyâ€"a dreadiul disease, of which, happily, we hear less now than in the days when men had to take long vovages on sailing ships and could not get fresh food. Mild (inms that bleed easily are a cause of great annoyance to many people. The condition is sometimes the result of a cause so innocent as a toothbrush that is too stiff, but it is occasionally a symptom of a seriâ€" ous disorder, or a sign of grave loâ€" cal trouble ; so it is always wise to have the true cause determined, in order to give that the proper treatâ€" ment. Bleeding gums are one of the cause ol g people. T the result a toothbru from the toes towards the leg. 1Ms saging is really a gentle rubbing should be kept up until the injured part regains its strength. â€"A Physiâ€" clan. upon a pillow. This complete rest must be maintained until the swellâ€" ing and inflammation subside, but the foot must not be used until it is perfectly free from pain. The apâ€" plication of cold water poured from a large jug, held a little distance above the foot, is of use in strengthâ€" ening the joint. After applving the douche massage the foot very gently for half an hour. This masâ€" saging is really a gnile rubbing from the toes towards the leg. This saging is really a gentle rubbing i MHow io Treat a Sprain, _ The ankle is perhaps the most frequently sprained of all muscles, due either to high heels or missing a step in climbing or descending stairs or obstacles. This form of sprain, from its preventing the perâ€" son injured from walking, is always serious. In a slight sprain the ligaâ€" ments are stretched and perhaps slightly lacerated, but in more seâ€" vere strains they are often snapped. In extremely bad cases a sprain might even be mistaken for a fracâ€" ture,. and the treatment could with advantage be the same until expert advice can be secured. As the swelâ€" ling and pain is extreme the boot or shoe should be immediately removâ€" ed. Sometimes it will be necessary to cut it away from the foot, but if it is taken off at once this may be avoided. The patient should go| to bed and, even where the ankle is only slightly strained, the feet should be kept constantly at rest, and on no accouat should be put to the ground. A bandage should be applied firmly, and the foot raised upon a pillow. This complete rest | must be maintained until the swell-} Un« twe It i Un the n th he will find si spongy Guins n s the shly wan ! He can fight <at that Sly, Wn nce, ior spongy ose teeth. Ia nd suppuration f the teeth or n sailing shmips esh food. Mild _ among chilâ€" ed on condensâ€" n as these chilâ€" ner diet with al conâ€" ited by use othâ€" leve salt ttle des but 0C d counselâ€"A succession of uwgï¬; fied and unholy proceedings followâ€" ed hard upon ths determination to ones particularly interested in the death of Jesus. f 12. And when they. were assemâ€" bled with the elders, and had taken 11. Now while they were going, behold, some of the guard came into the cityâ€"These, too, had seen and heard what had taken place. The occurrences were so important that they told unto the chief priests all the things that were come to pass. It seemed the natural thing to tell the chief priests, for even the guard knew that the chief priests were the 8. They fled from the tomb ; for trembling and astonishment had come upon themâ€"To go to the tomb with spices to anoint the body of Jesus, in full expectancy that they should find him, and then to be recoived as they were, with such an overwhelming announcement, was sufficient to make them afraid. For the time being they said nothing to anyone. _ Later, when they were calm and could estimate the imporâ€" tance of what they had seen and heard, they opened their mouths and told what they knew. Into Galileeâ€"It was in Galilee that Jesus declared himself to his close followers as the Christ the Son of the living God. In Galilee he would show these same disciples that the bands of death could not hold him. And Peter â€" Peter would be a most important herald of the news. He had denied Jesus, it was true. But he had learned his lesson. He could be trusted to the end. And he would understand the meaning of the resurrection perhaps as no other disciple. _ on e 7. But go, tell his disciplesâ€"The excitement continues. Do not reâ€" main here; spread the news abroad, spread it immediately. P Fs 6. The young man spoke with parâ€" ticularity. There was to be no doubt as to the fact. He did not say only, Ye seek Jesus ; he added, the Nazarene ; and then to leave no possibility of mistaken identity, he described what had happened to "Jesus, the Nazarene,‘"‘ he who hath been crucified. Again he is careful and emphatic in declaring the further fact, He is risen ; if you do not believe it, look, he is not here : behold, the place where they laid him! These words came in short, breathless utterances. The inference of the resurrection from the fact of the empty tomb is too stupendous for calm description. ._. . for it was exceeding greatâ€" Natural obstacles frequently seem much greater than they really are. 5. And entering into the tomb . . . they were amazedâ€"The fact that the stone was rolled away carried no surprise to them, even though it was the stone which gave them so much anxiety. They were amazed at the young man. Luke says there were two men in shining apparel. Matthew says an angel was sitting on the stone outside the tomb. They come to the tomb when the sun was risenâ€"As they started very early they evidently had to go some distance if they arrived after the sun. was up. But love knows neiâ€" ther distance nor fatigue. It is significant that the sun was risen when they came to the tomb, and that the full light of day shone upon the open grave. 3, 4. Who shall roll us away the stonc from the door of the tomb ? Verse 1. And when the sabbath was pastâ€"After sunset on the sevâ€" enth day of the week. No purâ€" chases were allowed.before sunset on this day, that is, the Sabbath. 2. And very early on the first day of the weekâ€"They bought the spices after sundown on the Sabbath so that they could go very early to the tomb the next morning. Lesson X. Christ Risen From Dead. Mark 16.1â€"8. Matt.28.11â€"1 Golden Text, Luke 24. 5. 6. THE SUKNDAY SCHOOL LESSON ‘‘Our men have made themselves fairly comfortable in the trenches,"" wrote the "Eyeâ€"wiin>ss presont with General Headquarters‘‘ in his descriptive account, dated October 13. "At all points subject to shellâ€"fire, access to the firingâ€"line from behind is provided by communication trenches. Theso are now so good that it is possible to cross in safety the fireâ€"swept zome to the advanced tronches from the billets in villages, the bivouacs in quarrios, or the other places where the headquarters of units happen to be. To those at home the life led by our men and by the inhabitants in this zone would seem stra age indeed. All day, and often at night as well, the boom of the guns and the scream of the shells overbead continue."‘ INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DECEMBER 6. British Soldiers in the Trenches in Northern France the Willieâ€"Say, teacher, toâ€"morrow‘s my birthday. Teacherâ€"Why, what a strange coincidence! It‘s mine, pe® t t ty ie 72 0 ind Auiciainigtare vties< nsceime 24 85 "mine, too. Willieâ€"Well, gee ! How‘d you ever get so much bigger‘n me, He was a new recruit, and the first day of parad> he was mustored up along with a batch of other reâ€" cruits to do drill. "Attention," thundered the sergeant. ‘"Shou!â€" der arms! Right about turn * The whole lot of men had performed their drill satisfactorily with the exception of one, who had not movâ€" ed a muscle.. The sergeant was mad with rage, and going up to the new recruit, caught him by the neck and shook him, asking if he was deaf. ‘‘No, sir,‘"‘ came the answer. ‘"‘Then why the dickens didn‘t you turn when I shouted right about turn ?" ‘‘Please, sir, I‘m leftâ€"handed." Now she is stricken to the point of exhaustion. A correspondent at Rome sends a graphic description of the disaster that has overtakeo her. Vienna is literally a great hosâ€" pital. _ Barracks, school houses, theatres, offices, the museum â€" and the rotunda of the famous Prater Park are all in use for the care of the wounded. Cholera and dysenâ€" tery, the former in mild but the latter in fatal form, have invaded the city. The public is beginning to understand the failure of the campaign. There are no evidences of ‘"‘patriotic passion, sympathy or enthusiasm.‘‘ The empire is on the ragged edge of catastrophe. Its dissolution would be the natural ouicome of its latest and most disâ€" astrous military experiment. ; Vienna Full of Wounded Menâ€"Inâ€" vasion of Cholera and Dysentery. When Austria so arrogantly made her demands upon Servia, late in July, the world regarded her as a great Power wrongfully attempting to coerce a weaker nation. She was confident, of course, of her ability to compel Servia to her way of thinking, irrespective of the rights of the case. She thought she could repeat the coup by which she obâ€" tained possession of Bosnia and Herzegovina a few years before. â€" This saying was spread abroad among the Jews, and continueth until this dayâ€"Some people will alâ€" low their prejudices to lead them to believe anything. Others withâ€" out prejudice will believe â€" what seems to be told them with some particularity. Many a just man has suffered because of statements conâ€" cersing him which had no foundaâ€" tion, but which "spread forth," continue in their falsity and harmâ€" ful effect.. id as Lney were iaughtâ€"1t is not likely that these soldiers did much talking. They were in too much danger. But the leaders of the church could base their account of the disappearance of Jesus‘s body on the supposed! truth of the solâ€" diers‘ statement. People would be lieve them when they said, ‘‘The soldiers told us so."‘ 15. So they took the money, and did as they were taughtâ€"It is not likely that these soldiers did much talking. They were in too much danger. But the leaders of the 14. If this come to the governor‘s ears, we will persuade him, and rid you of careâ€"The high priests and elders had had so little success in persuading the governor that it is not likely they laid much weight on their words when urging the solâ€" diers, But they were giving the soldiers much money and hence were confident of winning them. Then, too, they evidently thought they could also persuade the goverâ€" nor with monev. 13. Say ye, His disciples came by night, and stole him away while we sleptâ€"This counsel put the soldiers in a double predicament. 1f they had been asleep while on the watch they were punishabile with death, as soldiers. Again, sleeping, how cou!d they know what had happenâ€" ed ! Gave much moneyâ€"The ready reâ€" source of the high priests seemed to be money. They placed a peculiar value upon its purchasing power. in spiritual and â€"religious power they had to pay. > y A USTREIA PUNISHED. A New Reeruit. TORONTO _ It is, say the philosophers, darâ€" [ing the second year of married life, when its glamor of newness is wearâ€" ing off, that danger jarises. The\ man then begins to seitle down, but ‘ the woman is by nature retrospecâ€"| tive. Much tact, therefore, is need | ed to harmonize the present with the past. Fortunately little Jenâ€"| kins was eminently tactful, "‘Jack." I‘ said his wife to him one day, "I| don‘t believe you love me any more, l at any rate, nothing like so much as once you did.‘" _ ‘‘Nonsense, dear!"‘ I replied the husband in a convinâ€" cing, soothing voice. ‘"‘But why t "I don‘t know.‘"‘ . A pause. ‘‘Lots of little ways."" . Another pause. ‘"Why do you always let me get up to light the fire now ?"‘ ‘‘Nonsense, darling."" Being @hle to come down to a nice warm room always makes me love you more." If actions speak louder than 'wonis deaf mutes must be a‘ noisy Ruffs of fur and tulle are amonge the new things offered for the conâ€" templation and envy of smart wo manhood. , There is a high stand ing tulle ruching faring upward from a rather narrow, snug eollar of fur that clasps snugly about the throat Ostrich is used as a in naminz on many of the new blouses. Short flues are used as a frings to edge faring collars and cuffs of organel or satin or silk. It is a decidedly soft and effective means of trimâ€" ming. A child‘s hat of black velvet has six or eight strands of white and red beads about the crown, finished on one side with a red bead rose. A velvet hat has about the crown a band of beaver fur, with three tailored bows of inchâ€"w‘ds silver ribbon tilted smartly at the ~«Age of the brim. Leaves are twisted, one _ stem about another, around the crown of a black velvet Spanishâ€"sailor hat. There are many sleeves of white net, rather full, gathered into a narrow wristband in dark serge and satin bodices. Thess give a touch of daintiness that is essential in woman‘s dress. Black velvet ribbon is on minor features of the 4 Sometimes it is worn ab« throat, tied in a bow, wit} end or loop reaching to be in another bow on the {ront bodice. For a child there are seal muff and hat sets, trimmed with red or pink rosesâ€"one on the hat, one on the muff, both bright aad cheerful. many of the new Freach impo tions. Sometimes it is used belts, drawn through straps of fabric of the frock, sometimes | used for patch pockets. It is fo ed into upstandiag collars and d cuffs, and it even forms the edg. tuniecs and of the foundation sk beneath them. * The skirt scalloped about t edge is an accepted thing now, ai it is ‘as attractive as it is usual. breaks the full line about the ank] and makes the shortor skirt less a rupt in its ending. Short Eton effects of lacs on ch fon blouses are decidedly becomin The little jackets usually fall ov a girdle of some decided shads orange, green or brigat blue velve Wide silk braid is noticeable « out wires. It is edged with fur and so are the fronts of the pink chiffon blouse, and the fur is pat on with a band of narrow black silk braid. It is decidedly smart, this use of fur and braid together. A pink chiffon blouse has a high lace collar for all the world like the oldâ€"fashioned lace collars that used to be wired up under our ears and fastemned with hooks in the backâ€"two decided differences. Inâ€" stead it is fastened in the front and it is loose enough to stand wp withâ€" Nee ond Year of Marricd Life, Fads and Fancies r bright blue velvet. ' aid is noticeable on | A,; w Freach importaâ€" ]a mes it is used fnr'iu hroughk straps of che | zi1 rock, sometimes it i-’ pock>ts. Ii% is formâ€"| m the faskh tm â€"about w. with a Vour<s n QCAQS THE ORDEAL CALMLY 11 m the th n he K ht It Bhe seems too frail to be Spartan. Bhe is simply a shy country giri, prizing a gold band on her finger, who expresses the spirit of Britain. And she speaks the language in which Magna Charta and the Conâ€" stitution of the United States are written. Writing of Belgium‘s heroic part in the war, Mr. gl::_me_: says: < Bhe iries io appsar there in the diningâ€"room aos i{ they had hbeen marmned fcor some time and to enâ€" joy the favoritso dishes he has or dered, though every mouthfual sticks in her throat. â€" But she is not going to break down when he lsaves. No. Bhe might if he were to be away on a business trip in comfortable hotels in the States for six months, but not when he is going out to face bullets in a eupreme siruggle. d After all, a nation is only an asâ€" somblage of units ; and every unit in Britainâ€"Irish, Welsh, Seotch, Englishâ€"feels as you may have fe‘t if ever one near and dear to you were in danger and all you posso«s ed were at stake. In that eveni, dida‘t you make an exalted, earâ€" nest point of appearing perfectly natural ; of saying ‘"Good morning"‘ at the breakfast table in the usual tone and passing the time of day with a neighbor, and of keeping a> your work with particular concenâ€" traton in crder to drive that hauntâ€" ing. ‘"What if"" out of mind, and to give courage and fortitude to those around vyou ? straia in history. ‘Ihe other mind is with Nir John Jellicoe‘s fleet in the Norih Sea and with the allled treops. It is asking what ifâ€"what if Britain should lose command of the sea! What if the German army should reach Paris again! What ifâ€"â€"! Telepathy exchanges the thought between all men and woâ€" men. They do not say it aloud. They go on thinking to themâ€" selves, ‘‘We muddle along,"" and saying so rather proudly in expresâ€" sion of the calm way they have of doing things. An individual may have dignity often; a nation only on great occasions. Britain as a ration has dignity now, in this terâ€" rible ordeal of «pirit. minas: Une is ALLlCGNILNE thing in hand, whether it businecs to sew en buttos run a bank. PRe must sew buttons well or he may 1 plase. He amust watch h well under the greatest i straia in history. ‘Ithe oth is with SNir John Jellicoe‘s | savs Whittier, in lines which comâ€" bine the accuracy of the historian with the vision of the poet. Always has man been climbing a bit higher The Kaiser promised neuntrality ; â€"reaching slowly to levels which his forebears did not s2e, or, if they did see,. did not dare to seale. Each succeesding generation has seen barâ€" barism yielding a little to civiliza Frederick Patmer Says Nation,. with Aar Not in their day, nor yet in our own ! â€"but ever more and more, like the | spreading glow of morning in the i eastern skies! For what is more evidence in history than the stead_v] progress of the human race AMERICANX Is JMPRESsED Bi BREITAIX‘S DIG NITY. Buch was the assurance with which the prophets always spoke when they told of the coming ofthe time when "the work of righteousâ€" ness shall be peace, and the effect of righteousness quietness and conâ€" fdence forever "‘ Never was there any doubt in their minds as to the advent of the new and better day. Never did their tongues falter when they prophesied the establishment of God‘s kingdom among _ men. Israe! might be the weakest among the nations, but still did the proâ€" phets dare to tell of the time when ‘‘the Lord‘s house‘‘ should be esâ€" tablished on the mountain and all peoples "flow into it." _ Poverty and euffering might be weighing upâ€" on the people like fetters upon a slave, but still did they foresee the day when "every man shall sit unâ€" der his vine and fig tree, and none sha‘l make him afraid.‘" Wars and rumors of wars might be all about them, but still did they declare that “ men ‘‘shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears intul pruning hooks.‘"‘ Behold, they said, with the confidence of the watchâ€"| man who sees in the night the first| glimmers of the dawn, behold, "it| shall come to pass !" J And It Has Come To Pass, | 1 &0D WITHN THE $tigy As Surely as He Lives These Thinos q Which We Dream Shall Come to P), ‘‘Step by step since time began We see the steady gain of man, "It shall come to pass.""‘â€"Isaiah aticnce and Endurance. H D 10n On e in @vso soldier Briton has tw« is attending to the 11 wil vé Win. t« th ho . famous ndent, has ; of Britain dy‘s Magaâ€" loso â€" his his bank financial be â€" his r 1« has got only to Am ber 1â€"the day =« Parisâ€"is a losing G many ihat by Oct taken Paris and 4 French army, un}« defeat the Russian Germany, panlicu!s Pritish talk of a | fer: to the patient Abr&hlm lncoln, a resistence of Lee, a nation of Grant he with _&mi:'s u‘hi(l-‘h v reoruits after the the British are now an army, he promised to let BRelgiv deed to her house in ret lowing the imperial stoa be moved through. !f : would have liked to sco for the sake of pease. m of doing so, besausoâ€"t plain truthâ€"they were the Kaiser was lylag. # opinion which bis rs "O Unsle Joe : great excitement. between my {foref little «stubby finge fat! What faunny showing me toâ€"«la; ‘"You see, Bobby laughing, ‘"‘nmno m« your eyes may be, when you canaot they _ tell you."â€" panion . M iU‘m:st war i ‘"You never saw ger, did you ! ‘"Why, no," saic did not speak qu this time. forefingers, but at the i bevond them .‘ his plump left palm x sound and whole as th *"‘*Bobbâ€" how many # you?"‘ asked Uncle Jo ‘‘Ten," said Bobby. he thought the questi« foolish one. ‘"Hold your hands with the foreâ€"finger not quite, touching uncle. â€" ‘‘Now lookâ€" by. "It looks as if som a little round hole rig! palm of my hand Bobby laid down th had to look twice to m your see 1‘ Take a iargeâ€"sized magz any piece of stiff paper al een inches long. Roll it amall tube ; now, hold uy hand, with the pa‘m to and place the tube again of your hand. Look thr tube with your right eye, your left eye open. Wh; â€"boudy, did y« in your hand "‘ ; ‘‘There isn‘t hand," said Bob The children w sure when Uncl for he always loc although there w twinkle in his ev "‘Truth forever on wrong forever on th But that sceaffold sway and behind the dim : Standeth God within keeping watch above â€"Rev. John Havnes H This hope ‘‘it shall come t also must we, if we re of mankind and sea« plases of our own sou lieve that there is a G fore dare to say that dream which now we « race will some time be day seems dark about a blacker storm engul men. But why despai Lowel] put it vividly . Just here, in thi the presence of G« guiding and guard men, do we find th the assurance of th olden day in their future, and the similar forecasts o day ! Isaiah beliove a God in Israel," a he dare to say of . tion, ignorance to culture to law and order, Earch century has registered its broode&ed knowledge, sympathy, extended visg; and then, to be sure, have soâ€"called "‘dark ag>," wh seemed as though the gat diance of an epoch‘s sple been engulfed in "chaos ; night."‘ Toâ€"day, for exa whole fabric of mod »rn tin erashing to ruin. But, ta) all, the story is one of pro anywhere there is eviden, real existence of a God w is love andâ€"whose wil} is r evidence is in history. ‘Arnold was a historiaen m an ethical teacher when he his faith in God as "that j ourselves which makes fo ousness !*‘ BAe84808 888 ¢ e * 248909444 B0 u3 uut99 Oh B Young Fo‘ks} 17 ard There Is a God In Is H What Bobhs B _noâ€" maite: may be, the canaot belic you.*‘â€"â€"You did von h D lorefingers finger, so unny thing uDn y A cried 1 n N# n« E") 'h .n he gathered s aplendor haos and « r example, °rn times «o f1 1\ BC mc\:‘j its recorg d _deepe, vision, x re} com Ma aff W it i Cank capp _ ___SPatch from Berlin m“.h'r T&gebint! pri1 rom l'l'ince yon Buelow AtChancellor, in which | t the fear that the war A diffic ask windy tÂ¥ â€"""Or c«lï¬:::‘ the P the up h llrming' his beli -'Ml tbriumph of the Ge that &_W times ho re Buelow GERMANY‘S NJ Eive you ©° °300 €x hbours mind as to what y leave ? in from the east. Bik was never delay The Cossacks ar trian rearguards in Russian guns aAre : from the northâ€"cast courterâ€"offen .ulkkene_)n lRast of Cze; A despatch from Germany has fou:» the plains of Polan have won the gr modern times bet\ ‘and the Vistula, miles west of Wa: Grand Duke : have utterly orus} Hindenburg‘s divi captured or destro and have cut off t} smurviving | corps. The roreign Officialâ€"\ , this country, Travellerâ€"Then 1 the guns was out of action POLISH PLAINS A GERMAN STI than a ing an tra« ihey were cov, German battery German plan : French and B« not possibly ha construction of losing a great n The â€" German: three parts of t 1 and ab heir hand â€" vlinters . â€"â€"No, sir. '0"‘nfll you can NO« A despatch from the south of Dix Germans still ¢ bodies of infantry cnemy made an ai pontoon bridge a Nearly 200 men They were covere Allios HWad THE KING IS Great Mastery of Det British E ARMORED TRA!) SAVED THE The enemvy‘s CA q‘.ï¬nu()\fli rous ing activity, and a m tails such as might a financier, . comprise daily routine of his King. Often soor afi morning the King is study, and by the tim and helpers appear he the despatches and « the early delivery, m contents, and perha; "The very sight of the numerous « would intimidate n miralty, Home Ofic Army Headquarters their daily corres} ous marginal notes n the fordlooming conf The part which King G ing in the war is pic M,. E‘pre“ as follo ï¬i to their vssian ad\ _ YoOn j aba ndon train off 1 ‘HI\‘e you more from Russian YVictors Called the Gre: Modern Tin Enemy Throwin Cnl g In War Times 1, wWas zenst » Fears It Woj Will be 14 t) Aeross the 1 W Makl rps pu an eulogy of t Written by a hig at the front. H its that the Briti= n Cn Pailed groea ut wonders, esp« from â€" Lond n io Win th nd GTA