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Durham Review (1897), 17 Dec 1914, p. 6

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t $ #1 of 1O te #A * 4 t# I% l Al <€ross, ‘‘There are a good many â€" more who aren‘t even getting a wooden ‘I see that a good many German u_;ldier.g are getting / the ~ Iron ur principal source of weakness hes in our Quixotic respect for broken compacts, our exaggerated deference to the desires of neutrals. ‘"We are concerned to â€" avoid everything that our enemies could fairly construe as not ‘playing the game.‘ At the outset of the war we placed ourseives at obvious disâ€" advantages rather than fail in our imaginary duties towards them. Rlowly we are meginning to econoâ€" mize this selfâ€"denying Quixotism."" me whose opimon carmes weight at the project is workable. It will rdly be gainsaid that five hundred ousand thoroughly trained Japanâ€" e soldiers would turn the scale at e present conjunction. ~It has been truly said that the jeet for which we are now strugâ€" ng is not merely to ‘defeat the utonic armies or to be able to I1 the war a draw. Ncither conâ€" mmation would avail us aught. r it would not free us from the pas tree of Prussian militarism der whose poisonous shade all ropean State organisms wither. hat we aim at and what alone can tisly us is the annmihilation of ussianism together with all its products, the tearing out of its thermost roots. ‘Our princtoal sauvee af wanknace W L wne instance, at least, the incoming rush of the water was so great in volume that some German soldiers were drowned. No glory can be earned in war when the soldiers have to fight in freezing weather in water knee deep. The most ardent seeker after military fame will be chilled in batâ€" English financial resourtes toâ€" day can stand a drain of $10,000,â€" 000,0060. _ War brings out the last dollar of a people‘s hoard, and the British have for a century been savâ€" ing money, which is invested in every corner of the globe. This fountain of wealth, backed by its enormous population of 400,000,000, gives the British Empire an advantâ€" age over any European adversary in a long war. NOTES ANDCOMMENT s Napoleon blamed his own downâ€" fall largely upon English tenacity and English money. ‘The " present war has already demonstrated what English money may be expected to accomplish in this crisis. Asked for a loan, . the British investors rush forward and in two days hand Lloyd George $3,000,000,000.. At the close of the Francoâ€"Prussian War the Germans levied an appalâ€" ‘ing indemnity of _ $1,000,000,000 wpon the French, which the frugal Frank liquidated in less than three /€ ars it Th mé D L JAPS FILHT IX EUROPE Duke of Alva with a was seeking to quell f these countries int« Unknowr Graves. H lor them to take the ti ire inoperative in Japan 10 first hand knowledge id H the Tokvo Go\'er;lflll;égt pond to a request of this ut I have ‘been assured by «dvke cutting is not mnew for i of the low countries. When # lorce t n That Britain Should No Be Too Ouixotie. d AUS 1) d s rmer equent need o 1€ s that make it im to take the field L T throw in th N But t 1 t [ what be ready u n men field L1 it M mis splenâ€" ailable at Un ak Nf it n that that the N ut as N U y H 1D ‘‘There,"‘ said the amateur strateâ€" gist, ‘*is how I‘d end the war. What do you think of it ?1" ‘I can‘t help thinking," replied the little man slowly, "how lucky !io.- Kaiser is that you are over ‘‘Why, I forgot that!‘ coniessed the princess, looking up, red and ashamed . , But only a golden mirror was be side her, laying on the marble pave ment. L tightly away f mother "I‘ll take it back, then,‘"" said Vaâ€" ria, soberly. â€" ‘"Butâ€"did everybody vou meet look like you ?‘ * Lili nodded. Somethingâ€"what was it !â€"made her very uncomfortâ€" able. There was a long silence. ‘‘You mean, then, that you were thinking every minute ofâ€"Princess Lili P‘ * Lalis hurrying down the ‘throne steps was too much. Shaking her curls over her eyes she turned and fAed from the palace, down through the garden to the terrace ‘by~â€" the sea, where she lay on the marble steps and cried like any common little girl who wanted her mother and couldn‘t somehow reach her. ‘‘You didn‘t enjoy my gift * askâ€" ed a silvery voice. 4 "I hate it!"" sobbed Lili, . with tightly closed eyes. "I couldn‘t get away fromâ€"from me. I want my "Lili! My child!"‘ exclaimed, the queen, and King Clarimond sprang to his feet at her wail ‘of terror. The sight ‘of two more Princess Lilis hurrying down the throne steps was too much. Shaking her "Oh !"‘ she cried, ‘‘Iâ€"Iâ€"â€"‘and in a flash the great hall was filled with a sea of white and gold gowns, above which hundreds of startled faces framed in golden hair was staring at her. In alarm she caught up her silken dress and rushed into the palace, up to the great audience hall where sat King (Clarimond and Queen Florinne in state with all their court, receiving the ambassadors from a neighboring kingdom. "Oh t‘ whew erisal ~ATâ€"_Iâ€"__‘Towes t ne M ‘‘Rhould they have seen your face when they peeped in "‘ asked Varia, gravely. ‘Of course." said TVih> nattishlv H ‘Oh, of course, I don‘t mind your playing that you ‘&re me," said the princess in a conscious tone. "Other children do it, too. So silly! Just because all the courtiers bow when i pass, and think what beautiful eyes. and hair I have, and how gracefully I walk, and how charmâ€" ingly I dress, they suppose I have everything that I want. I haven‘t. That mirror, for instance. My moâ€" ther, the queen, gave it me for my birthday. 1 liKed it at first, but when other people look into it they see themselves instead of me. What‘s the use of being a princess if you can‘t have a mirror to yourâ€" self ‘"Gracious ‘‘ exclaimed the little princess, whirling around; for inâ€" stead of the crash that should have come, a clear, merry laugh rang in her ears. Behind herâ€"on the top stepâ€"sat a silvery, gauzy figure. No one is allowed here without my permission,‘‘ said Princess Lili. "1 know," smiled the stranger. "But I wished so much to see you, your Highness. Do you mind!" "Nâ€"not exactly," returned the princess. ‘"So many people want that that I‘m quite used to it. But it‘s against the rules. Did you catch my mirror when it fell ?" The stranger shook her head. "I haven‘t any mirror,‘"‘ she said. "But who are you?‘ demanded Lili. "How did you get in ?" "I‘m whoever I happen to be,‘ was the careless reply. "I‘m Varia 1 could be you if I wanted to." "I hope it‘s more than a mile deep :‘ she said, hotly, lifting the mirror above her head ; but before she could fling it into the sea it melted from her hands like a broken bubble. * But her Highness felt more like a thunderstorm. Her face was all aâ€" frown as she leant over the splashâ€" ing green water. W The Prineess and the Mirror. Princess Lili stood on the broad steps of the terrace looking into the sea at the foot of the palace garden. Her dress was white and silken, with flowers of gold woven into it. Her yellow curls were caught into a comb of pearls, and in her hand was a golden mirror. Altogether she was like a sunray on the white marble terrace. It‘s nev Wi W} [} W The Fortunate Kaiscr. 1 K it again ; it‘s horrid !‘ you prefer to be able to f without a hirror, your It‘s very easvy " o that almost d be amusing. that birthday your _ mirror, throwing out ie gesture of the nC The louder a man talks the more he reminds us of a,base drum. . is too atomic for consideration. Over here everyone pokes fun at the stiffnecked martinets of the army, but when doing so they usâ€" vually go up an alley and talk in whispers." Five years ago George Ade, while in Berlin, said this to an English interviewer; ‘‘The German officer regards every civilian as an insect. The foreign civilian is looked upon as a bacillus. The American civilian | bility of the Pope playing an imporâ€" | tant role in the settlement of peace. | In this event the allies would have Ja weak representation in compariâ€" | son to their enemies, | The Sole Representative, ’ Russia has no formal Ambassaâ€" dor to the Pope. France has broâ€" ik.t-n off her former diplomatic relaâ€" Howard has been British Minister at The Hague and Luxemburg. Nearly fifty years ago he was an aitache at the British Legation in Washington, and married at that time Miss Cecilia Riggs, the daughâ€" ter of G. W. Riggs, of Washington. She died in 1907. tions. Sir Henry Howard is, therefore, the sole representative of the three countries. Germany has during recent years increased her solicitude for the Pope‘s friendship, which was offiâ€" cially sealed by Bismarck granting certain privileges in the Reichstag to the Catholic party in Berlia when the Pope created the first German cardinal, Additional carâ€" dinals have been added from time to time, so that the German Emâ€" pire has at presont a strong corps of supporters at Rome. Austria is still regarded by the Popes as their last stronghold against the encroachments of Proâ€" testantism, and the relationship beâ€" tween the Pope and the Emperor Francis Joseph is very intimate. The Duke of Norfolk in England, the premier duke of the realm, is a Catholic, and he has spent a greater part of his life in reconciling the British Government to a policy of recognition of the political status of the Pope. It was the Duke of Norâ€" folk who personally superintended the present plans for Sir Henry Howard‘s going to Rome. P It is said that the allies are alarmed at the prospect of Prince Â¥on Buelow‘s preponderance of power at the court of the King of Italy as Ambassador from the Gerâ€" man Emperor, and that England, Russia, and France have also beâ€" come suddenly alive to the possiâ€" Sir Henry Howard‘s appointment is announced as being only tempoâ€" rary, to congratulate the new Pope upon his accession, and then to reâ€" main in Rome during the progress of the war. But it seems to be genâ€" erally â€" accepted as an opening wedge for the appointment of a perâ€" manent Ambassador â€"from â€" Great Britain to the Vatican. England has been the great foe of political Roman Catholic doeâ€" trines since the days of Henry VIII. and Queen Elizabeth, and the esâ€" tablishment of the English Protesâ€" tant Church ; and although the Engâ€" lish Sovereign maintained a repreâ€" sentative in Rome as long as the Pope was sovereign thereâ€"which was until 1870â€"the relation was broken off as soon as a King of Italy assumed the throne. _ Only Temporary. All of the nations of Europe which were Catholicâ€"as Austria, France, Portugal, and Spainâ€"conâ€" tinued for the time being an Amâ€" bassador at the Vatican, while sendâ€" ing another one to the Quirinal. Germany, being Protestant and Catholic, was finally induced by the Vatican to maintain also the two Ambassadors. But England held out. â€" The Government, knowing the strong antiâ€"Catholic sentiment in the country, could not be perâ€" suaded to brook the storm of disapâ€" proval such a move would cause. The appointment of Sir Henry Howard as envoy from Great Briâ€" tain to the Holy See is the first indication of the papal policy, and a signal diplomatic victorKefor the Pope. To bring about the estabâ€" lishment of direct diplomatic relaâ€" tions between England and the Vatican was the thing Rampolla labored for unceasingly from the day he entered office until he left it, when the late Pope, Pius X., was elected and took Cardinal Merry (Siel Val to be his Secretary of tate. Sit Henry llowud Representative at the Vatican. The new Pope, Benedict XV., made no forma} announcement of policy when he assumed the triple crown of St. Peter last September. But as he had been the devoted u. pil of Cardinal Rampolla, the S'gc' retary gf State‘ of Leo XIII., for twentyâ€"five years, it was assumed that the Vatican under Benedict XV. would return to the political ideas and aspirations of Rampolla. BRITAIN‘S ENYOY TO ROME. George‘s Observations. Sir Henry Howard. Ssn ini‘cs en ut uel_:-'n; 1{;.:.1. "'-TEu'EZfi;';IEI.; | ensign . â€"He s lmnd "as~ their mbut not in For the earth shall be full of the knowledge of Jehovah, as the waâ€" ters cover the seaâ€"There can be no vacuum in the waters which cover the sea. Any track that is made is immediately covered up â€" and . its place unknown. So there can be no failure anywhere of the knowledge of the Lord coming to the last huâ€" man. being.. The mass of humanity, like the sea full of water, is to be completely immersed in the underâ€" standing and fear of God. And this means allegiance to and worship of the "Almighty. k 10. _Qntg_ him shall the Mmj In all my holy mountainâ€"Not only in Mount Zion, but in all Palâ€" estine ; dnd, as Palestine then, to the prophet, was the whole of the known world, so to us "all my holy mountain‘‘ must mean the world to its last possible limits. The uniâ€" versality of the reign and influence of the Messiah is thus clearly indiâ€" cated. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Most astounding of all, the suckâ€" ling child shall play on the hole of the asp, and the weaned child shall put his hand on the adder‘s denâ€" The suggestion is that of a babe inâ€" advertently coming in contact with a poisonous reptile and not sufferâ€" ing injury. Merely to touch such an animal was sure death. * The word den probably means the glittering eye of .the serpent, which would be especially attractive to a child. 9. They shall not hurt ror destroy â€"*‘"‘They‘‘ means universal manâ€" kind. No one will have the desire for aught that would be unkind or wanton. A little child shall lead themâ€"It will understand the animals and the animals will understand it. In the reign of peace there shall be no advantage â€" of _ brute _ strength. Strength shall be counted in terms of the innocence and winsomeness of childhood. The lion shall eat straw like the oxâ€"He will become domesticated and not prey upon other animals or man for his meat. And he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, etec.â€"The king, according to the Hebrew idea of kingship, was to have a twofold function ; first, he was to lead his people in battle; and second, to administer justice in time of peace (See 1 Sam. 8. 20). As the prophet‘s emphasis is entirely on that of peace, he overlooks or ignores enâ€" tirely the first functions of the King, or Messiah. The precursor to a reign of peace is to disabuse the minds of autocratic kings toâ€"day of the idea that their chief function is to lead their people in war. 3. And his delight shall be in the fear of Jehovahâ€"Not only on his own account, but on the account of others. Wherever he sees men exâ€" ercising a fear of Jehovah there will his heart rejoice and be glad. Of knowledge and of the fear of Jehovahâ€"‘The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.‘"‘ The knowledge of Jehovah is an underâ€" standing of his character and of his claim upon men, the fear of Jehoâ€" vah is theâ€"ordinary Old Testament term for picty. It is significant to note that even the Messiah, with his supernatural endowments has not only an insight into the nature of God, but an instinctive desire to love and obey him, which in essence is the very heart of religion. Counsel and mightâ€"A man of discriminating counsel is necessarily a man of peculiar power. He will know how to frame right intentions and bring them to pass. C to discern right values and relaâ€" tionships, a very necessary quality for a ruler or judge. _ A 2. The Spirit of Jehovah shall rest upon ‘himâ€"(See Luke 24. 49 in last week‘s lesson). From the beginâ€" ning he will be overshadowed by the Most High. The supernaturainess of ‘the© Messiah‘s endowment is clearly indicated. This Spirit of Jehovah is indicated in three sepaâ€" rate pairs of virtues : 6 "de Wisdom and understandingâ€"The power not only to know, but also Goldea Text, Isa. 11. 6. Verse 1. And there shall come forth a shoot out of ithe stock of Jesseâ€"This same idea is expressed in Isa.>6. 13« Even though the tree may be felled the stock will remain. The new Israel will spring from the old stump of the house of David. The vague use of the term J ~sse‘‘. would seem to indicate the indefiâ€" niteness of the origin of the Mesâ€" Lesson XII. The Reign of Peace (Christmas Lesson)â€"Isa. 11. 1â€"10. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DECEMBER 20. hear the 50 o‘clock> whistle afterâ€" ‘"Well, he can‘t hear the alarm sbck lLlohings,‘bgt he can always ‘Is your husband very deaf, Mrs Grady 1 "‘Bister said you were painfully homely .‘ ‘‘Does your face hurt you much ¢* ‘‘No, Johnnie. What made you think my face ached ? Sheâ€"Euppose they didn‘t, they must have heard me scolding you. Sheâ€"Think how it disgraces me before the neighbors to have you come home as you did last â€"night. drunk, Understood Children,. Applicantâ€"*‘No, ma‘am, 1 could not work where there‘s chi‘dren.‘ Madamâ€"*"But we advertised for a girl who understood children." Applicantâ€""Oh, 1 understand ‘em, ma‘am. That‘s why 1 wouldn‘t work where they are." Not Fearing a Rival. Mistress (to servant) â€" Br«lget, you remember the policeman who sat in the kitchen with youa s late last night without a light ! Bridgetâ€"Yes, ma‘am. Mistressâ€"Well I met him this afâ€" ternoon, and I took advantage of the opportunity to speak to him. Bridgetâ€"Sure, ma‘am, ye neod not think that‘ll make me jealous. Green Chiffon and Monkey Fur. Green golfine, chiffon and monkey fur are combined in this way : There is a foundation skirt of soft green silk golfine. There is a long, gathorâ€" ed tunic of green chiffon that leaves exposed about 15 inches of the foundation skirt. The tunic is edgâ€" ed with a fringe of monkey fur» The long chiffon sleeves are edged with monkey fur and the bodice is comâ€" posed of golfine andchifion. NVelvet GinrdI¢s.â€"Velvet _ girdle: are used on gowns of chiffon and laceâ€"long bands of velvet embroid ered in jet and colored beads. They are fastened at the waist at the right side and tie low on the lefi hip. They suggest, somewhat, a sword belt. The Returning Jabot:â€"Is the jaâ€" bot returning to fashion in earnost| It seems to be. Some of the smartâ€" est neckwear shows this oldâ€"fashâ€" ioned finish. Sometimes a single folded jabot finishes one of the new high collars. The jabot is always a soft and pleasing finish. with straps. Anyway, the slippe with a s.rap over the instep is fa far more comfiortable to dance in than the slipper cut on the lines o a pump. And among the new dane ingâ€"slippers those with siraps, per haps, outnumber those _ without Often the strap is soâ€" elaborate« that it is a network of brocade ovei the instep. Rometimes it is as sim ple as the strap on a child‘s leather pump. Heâ€"But, my dear, no one saw Apron Fashions.â€"The apron ideaj' has been slow in developing, and | it is one of the ideas that will never | dominate. Yet it grows and grows | and toâ€"day there are many frocks| with aprons. The long tunic that| we have is an outgrowth of the | Cheruit apron tunic, a long tunic| introduced a year agoâ€"a tunic that | ended at the sides, apronwise. That | is still sometimes seen. It is most| effective in evening frocks, when it is made of net or lace, often heavily | weighted with jet or metallic fringe . | Sometimes it hangs an inch or so| longer than the short foundation / skirt. Then there are short apron | effects of many sorts on frocks for day and evening wear. Strapped _ Slippers. â€" Probabls dancing is responsible for the fashâ€"‘ ion for slippers held over the instep | with straps. Anyway, the slipper with a sl.rap over the instep is far| far more comfortable to dance in ; than the slipper cut on the lines af Seasonable Trimmings, â€" The naâ€" ture of trimmings changes with the seasons, and velvet chestnuts are among the new hat decorations. They are very effective. Chrysanâ€" themums, too, are used for hats and for corsage flowers. Violets, always popular in winter, are shown in silk and velvet for corsage bouquets, some of them combined with roseâ€" buds, some with mignonnette. ['h'&ps. they seem rather severe after our many seasons of folds and furâ€" belows. Some of the coats have the oldâ€"fashioned notched revers and eollars, the collars as well as narâ€" row turned back cuffs, faced with black velvet. Then there ism the tailored oneâ€"piece frock that has proved itself such a strong rival to the coat suit for street wear. It too, shows simplicity almost amounting to severity, and boasts much stitchâ€" ing, many flatly pressed seams, and often braid bindings and velvet fac ings. Coat Suits.â€"There are some coat suits in evidence that are dubbed "‘strictly tailored.‘‘ They are decidâ€" edly smart looking, although, perâ€" prophet should have used this miliâ€" mâ€"{ expression as indicating the emblem which would call all people to Messizh. While emphasizing peace he inadvertently turns to the usage of war. This is suggestive of the difficulty with whith man will divest himsolf of the idea of war. The vocabulory of warfare will long continue as a large ‘part of spoken and written speerc%'n PEHATA Sto . His restingâ€"place shall be gloriâ€" ousâ€"Wherever the Christ Spirit abides glory abounds. war.. His leadership shall be that Degrees of Deafness. So Homely It Hurt. The Woman 0f 1t. "gsh. :mz:red ngle | sont d new | tx.:m © rect, those were removed to a place of safety as soon as war was deâ€" clared. â€" Whether the pictures by Titian, Tintoretto, Zucchero and Poussin were saved does not yet apâ€" pear. There was a wonder{ual eollection of tapestries in the cathedral. Forâ€" tunately, if the despatches are corâ€" ‘| kings of Prance were crowned there ‘and consecrated with oil from the â€"|sacred vial that tradition said was > | sont down from Heaven for the bap 4 | ti_:m of Clovis, ;| _ The Cathedral, where that cerâ€" mony used to take place, was built in the thirteenth century. The , | most striking feature of its exterior ) is the facade; there are three en |trance portals deeply recessed and exquisite in proportion, and these | portals contained between five and ‘| six hundred statues of saints, anâ€" |gels and symbolic figures. There "wero also very interesting groups |of sculptured figures that repre sented scomes from the life of the: Virgin, the conversion of Saint | Pavl, and the Last Judgment.| Many of the statues had been someâ€"| what defaced by time, but most| were intact, and they were perâ€"| haps the most interesting cxamples of mediaeval sculpture the world | possesses. Above this remarkable | throng of figures of stone was a| great stone window, nearly forty | feet across, and filled with supc-rh’ stained glass. Higher still was a row of fortyâ€"two collosal statues in | niches, representing the baptism ‘-f' Clovis, and the kings of France.| Above all soared the lofty tmwers.l The towers were originally crowned | with spires, but fire destroyed them ; in 1481. The north portal, which was also decorated with statues, is“ only less beautiful than the westorn [ facade. The graceful flying butressâ€" | es were each crowned with a niche | in which a statue stood. No other:; caurch in the world was so lavishly |; and, on the whols, so effectively deâ€" ; corated with seulpture. | The interior is less ornat>. but i: contained over one hundred statues. The nave is 125 feet in height, and hardly inferior in maiesty to any of | the other great cathedrals of northâ€"| f ern France. It is an old saying that the choir of Beauvais, the nave of Amiens, the portal of Reims and the "‘ towers of Chartres would together |* make the loveliest church in the world.. The glass in the great winâ€"| t dows of nave> and transept at Reims was one of its greatest charms. | Almost all of it was made at the time when such work was 1 most beautiful. * % In front of the ¢athedral stands a | What the absence of the love of | money really means is ciearly seen | in the case of those amusingly pathâ€" | etie people who live under the reâ€" follows as inevitably in the one case as corruption of the body in the other. And in both cases no health is possible until the minutest trace l«)f infection has been ‘"burnt and | purged away."" The rich young rulâ€" er in the parable must sell all he lhad and give to the poor as the final | condition of eternal life. And this, ‘not because there is any virtue in poverty per se, as so many have erâ€" lruneousl.\' supposed, but because there must be evidence that Mamâ€" l mon is no longer disputing the mas | tery of the soul with God. One of the Architectural Wonders of the World. In nothing did Jesus show Himâ€" self more fully the master of the art of living than in His clear disâ€" eernment of the absolute and perâ€" manent contradiction between the love of rightsousness and the love of money, or, as He phrased it, beâ€" tween God and Mammon. Myriad are the attempts which have been made to reconcile these two pasâ€" sions of the soul; mvriad are the teachegs who have thought to find the middle way. But Jesus never wavered in His understanding and declaration that ‘no man can serve (these) two masters."‘ Let but the slightest fondness for money, or for the things that money can buy, find entrance within the heart and we have a situation parallel to the entranca of a disease germ within the ‘bodv. Jesus Declared That "No Man Ca» ; Two Masters." THE FONDNESS F0R MQNp) THE CATHEDRAL AT REIXM®. "No man can serve two masters . . Ye cannot serve God and Mam on.‘‘â€"Matthew vi., 24. Corruption of the Spirit aimt l run by | .““mx“ss © statute of Joan of Are, for Reims, after her victorics .Efi*' that Joan brought worthy king, Charles VIl crowned. ‘"Naw, mum,"" said Brid niver lather thin wan at : “v d.y.l) ‘‘Why, is it only â€" thought it was two Bronsofi as the clock dert. "I should say healthy. Why, there one death here in te ‘"Indeed ‘ repiied &‘And may I ask wh died * tion It is better to run away ; tain things than let them you. Such martyrdom is us necessary, and bad {o: round. Don‘t let yourseli get i: habit of being bored. 1: worth while. When you fe> ing on, plunge at once int« task that will take all you and energy. you, Bbooks are plentil put away the offending choose another. If a noise at night w don‘t let it continue to up and see to the matt« right. Here are a few | swhject : If people fret y« cessary to be rud« instead. to avoid t\ Aw one ( times in th« is quite pos as it were, mel n wmecha constit ‘of all human word and act ’in the famous any man thir stead, to avoid th Don‘t read books that justice and t« Hence that M HEALTH Our doctor; he died which condit Con wisc No Place for Doctors Healthy | said the p: t. *"*I should say this : Ithy. Why, there‘s on‘ death here in ten year Indeed ‘ repiied th> A High Order of 1 or deep springs of em prophets, saints and ma ever ridiculous when d the mental and spiritoa genius, these are yetr ; which constitute the « !‘m‘sc see24%f ’lil‘o.ch of inherenat a living or keep a hands. Too easy ; struggle for riche to material thing quest for money the quest for nat inward dreaming ; hold back a single of another‘s need, along through |i¢â€" tion all whose for that they know th And exasperating ; tainly are from th, point of the pract yet it is these ver, parent shiftlessnes and worldly simpli united with m« e inie mis n me y lat g t« man ng y« e His Mamn mavy c U# You Feel AV Bridget‘s Axiom Pevention U ne and i M the 1« W h n |) 1K 1€ N n« & EPVg G n be »Mak W ? to the h."" _ W gul OWBs very dark and a lighe a“; haze made sear the m mh Fortunate)s M ‘..m put on the alert the N“ in the morning by trance ~f d the harbor en BA unidentifed stcamer A 20â€" CC9S 40 t time of the attack that RAIDS ON »o A despatch from The body of Gen. C the rebel leader, w recently while atton across the Yaal Riv. ment troops, has | Vhe'e KP&”, not fa where Gen, Beyers sink. â€" The official says that there is regard to the ident and succeeded in ho tion." On previous drummer listinguish bringing up ammu heavy sheil and rifle : lllulll' Mfionb in cover some wounded official account of th the honor. The oth the decoration is 1. DObCOlI of the Coldsi who at Chavannes cover on two occasio: heavy fire wounded posed in the open.‘" vers have been appoi tons of the Distingu DM(‘ r‘ -fw erman general fire, found in a Aisne in & room doned hastily by; seems to have co; that the Germans cessary to econ: tion. The order structions are : the lessons of the with the instructiâ€" and because Ge working at its : provide the army Hefinitely, The ; is recommended + is I'Ofth while Valorous BDeeds Bone by Soldiers on Battiene A dml from â€" Lond Two additional Victoria have been awarded Km for valor on the field of ba of them was conferred on | Bpence John Bent Ask < : cashire Regiment, who. »nâ€" heer, "after his officer, a sergeant and section com was struck down,. took « ‘mh from Dove VICTORIA CRoss; ©copy « Body of General Bor New Instructions AMMUNITION Is A despatch ) German Submarines sunk' But is Not Cont go w nood of the attack say “h submarines were i of the Co t Chavann m two occa fire wounde ‘Pe fired by the eas :"‘dlnn. the op claim to } &e and to | the identif, ° @tback, and thes fi'““,- ‘:‘-‘e Qb,t(fl'l «i gallantry instruct t_ht German THE CANADA ST Crown Bran Caramels, Fudge so many kinds. C heaps of tafly, and tried it knows that of fun! An excell And it makes delig on ships Montreal Brantford n Manulf act About Makes De en M Sold by 1 f 2, 5, 10 as MADE I 111

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