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Durham Review (1897), 14 Jan 1915, p. 6

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Tbr, NOTES AND COMMENTS The militarist rhihmather holds; that v" is necessary u the moral) tonic of nations. . terribU but in-) wiring and etrengthenimr ordei/ necessary antidote for the auto-in- toxieation of peace. Without its' rigorous discipline men grow wit. weak-willed. irrmrolate, unduly fearful. Ark the miner, the New- foundland fisherman, the lumber jack. the steel mill worker, the en- gineer and Iirerrsn in their cab, the brakes'ran. the fireman, the police- to be demonstrated. The darkness and destruction of war are tragical- ly plain. If in spite of them war is ,ocd, the militarist will have to prove it very clearly. Promising that I have no omcia] knowledge. I state that I am oonfr. dent. with God's blessing. of the “was: of the allies in our righteous cause in the coming year. This opinion is based on sixty-three "eri. seryice, _ , , r“, - [Inger the Crown I have made a continuous study of war problems Since IMI. I assisted in the disem- barkation of the allied armies in the Crimea. fought alongside the French for nine months, and learn- ed to appreciate the unflinching, en- during courage of the Russians. Every soldier realizes the marvel- on: tactical improvement of their troops since the Manchurinn cam- paign. This, with their devoted courage ted.ytuerrbertr, must make mm. It is impossible to think of the Invy without meaning its vast debt of gratitude to the 1yi'1tP,"ttLte,',!- - - . ' A 44:--1 .- As 90 the national Blur!', 1 nave Been it in many units of the new ”my. All soldiers must recognize tha) there are types of men in the ranks who have never stood there before. I the parish in which I " Nougat 'el on: 10 per cent. {we enlated nee Augupt: I feel an: that the Draw, who began molt reluctantly, ,rjlF.Hhr,U on until the .150: “Mm their ob- man what they thhsk of this theory. It is true these are hand nun occu- ptur.ms, and allowance must be made for that. But duos the argu- ment ho'd even for men and women in safer employmentsl Now throughout the country. and especially in our great cities, thott- sands of men and women are under going the drastic discipline of mid and hunger and anxiety. They are at war with fate, with themselves, 'sith the elements. with the and}. tions of their mnrranade environ, ment. " w" proper is necessary still further to brnee them it is yet Says Allin: Will Be Suenpulul by End of Present Year. The following expression on the General. war outlcvk was made to the New York World by Field Mar- shal Sir Evelyn Wood: A _ _ them irresistible. AH war students realize the bet. terment of the French away since 1870. l have served fifty-nine years with our troops, and believe that, mainly owing to the Ute Lord Wol- uloy. we have the best trained "my in the world, while in cour- gge it vies with that of its comrades of the sister service. It aid the navy have helpcd to create the Em- 0| tv'""'""" .u ...- n n, _ _ in of the Ute Admiral Malian, which induced the clear thinking out of the problems of the command of the seas. Al to the national spirit, I have seen it in many units of the new an? All soldiers must recognize A. t.hg.ro no types of men in, the Mankind in wry far as yet from a ureter}- of its destiny. and lite for" almmt all men holds enough of orusntie to keep us from getting very flabby. This is not to say that nations. peoples. classes, like indi- nduuls. do not sometimes dogener ate morally and grow flabby, cow- ardly. indolent. But it is lend likely t'.at theyaro weak because they are n 'L warlike than that they are not warlike because they are weak. Be- cause virile peoples usually have been warriors it does not follow that wannaking made them virile. t"nnuetrtiorrably the necessity M fighting has developed in nations the warrior virtues, courage, deter- n-inati: n, conquest of pain, fidelity, ratience, unity. obedience. But no also dues the necessity of living, Bo far as most of the human race is War itself does not prove it. In Fa rt, it tends. to prove the opposite. tlreen civ‘YEnns do not fight as well proves. though the superfieinl theo- rists who rely on minute men for modern “er ignore it. On the other Land, civilians, including men from the 'most sedentary occupations, are made goal soldiers at a rate which would - be attained if a life of Hri‘allfd peace had worked the hav- I-z' upon their wills that militarism would have us believe in. And the rv-ar'nn seems not aboure. There is r, ml enough in the daily lives of u: mt of uv- for the persistent exer- (we of will. There are doubt and f are, pain and sorrow, ambition and necessity. a complex of my ”mun-es to keep the will from atro-' phy. War may key up the soul, but In when d.) the issues of peace. and after all the health of the will does n. t require excessive stimulant. feet as seasoned soldiers. They are more subject to panic. They are "at well controlled. This history There’l th 1d, of dead tt'mt- molt tnarily trees. SIR EVELYN WO00. Ti ID people vat a. surprismg quantity Ot fund. it is nevertheless in general true that those who eat more than they need are likely to grow stout, especially if they eat a good deal. "t the sugars. starches. and fat funds. On the other hand the nitrogenous foods ‘Iead to tissue waste. That is why physicians sometimes treat. can-s of extreme obesity by a meat diet. _ A _ Adipysity is the medical name for expesuve fat; it means tht same thins_as corpyderree.er obeslfy. lt Anything that increases, oxidation tends to lesson fat. and therefore slum people should practice deep breathing. in order thet the body may burn up its waste materials rapidly. If ordinary exercise, even walking, has grown intolerable, you can brvathe deeply while you are sitting still. The treatment of cor- pule-u-e with mtrdisrirtes should all mus be directed by a physician, Eur there is danger in experiment- ing or in ful‘nwing advertised remo- is a disease of nutrition, and often its uccurrmce cannot be explaf ted. It is hereditary in some families, and it also seemq to bear some, rela- tion to certain constitutional trou- bles; it is often Been in the victims of gout, for example. , -_. most useless muscles. Although fat people are not " “ays great esters, and many thin people vat a. surpfis'mg quantity of "WWQoovsv It is not always easy to decide, just when a person has become too fat for health, A French physician, however, has calculated that the amount of tat in a. healthy man is about one-twentieth of q the bsdy weight, and in a Woman, about one- sixteenth. We are all better " for a proper amount of fat; adipose tissue is a poor conductor of heat, and so prevents the bodily heat from passing off too rapidly. More.- oxer, in cases of illness, it gives the patient same reserve to draw upon. But when a person begins to suffer from his fut, when he grows breath- less and disinclined to move about, he is certainly beyond the line of safety. When a Tery stout person stup< exercising, the muscles begin to atrophy. The weaker they get, the vooner they ilag under the weight they have to carry. In that way, a vicious tircle is established: first, heavy weight and shirking muscles; then, as a result of that, still hemier weight, and finally, al- most useless muscles. There are two things that the hair must have in order to preserve its health and beauty: perfect cleanli- mws and a you] circulation of the blood in thr, scalp. Badly treated or neglected hair is not beautiful; it grows dry, and dull, and brittle, and if the bad treatment continues it may gradually disappear entirely. Most persons do not begin to ttei-nhhrroijreir hivVsistm ehotigll. They wait until a good deal of it has fallen out, and then they think to set matters right by a few ap- pointmente at the hair-dresser's and a, bottle of tonic. But nothing de- mands and responds to consistent good treatment more thin the hair. " is hard to say just how often you ought to have a shampoo. but be sure it is done often enough to keep both hair and scalp in a condition of absolute cleanliness. 7 If washing seems to make the hair too dry, rub in a few drops of some bland oil after the shampoo. Do not put the oil directly on the hair. where it cannot possibly do any good. but massage it thorough- ly into the scalp with the tips of the fingers. That needs to be done only after a shampoo, in order to rentore the natural oil that the washing has removed, but it is a good plan to massage the scalp with the tips of the fingers every day, both night and morning. That is perhaps the most important single role for those who would possess lino hair. The massage should be vigorous, but not rough, for the pur- pose is to bring the blood to the sur- face of the skin and to keep the scalp freely movable on the surface of the skull so that the blood can circulate freely. The free circula- tion of the blood is the whole secret of the strength, the gloss. and the beauty of the human hair. Careful brushing (with a scrupulously clean brush is also helpful, for it tends to remove dust. to make the hair more glossy. and to make it amen- able to its owner's will.-Youth't, Companion. Americans are noted for their in- ventive genius, so that it is not sur- prising that that nation claims to be the originator of the submarine proper. During the American War irrludependenee a contact mine of gunpowder was invented. Sub- merged beneath the waves it ex- ploded on being touched by a pass- ing vessel. Fulton, the inventor-or, rather, perhaps one should say. one of the Gveniorts--of the steamboat, had a plan for a mine, or aeubmarine boat, which he "submitted both to France and Great Britain; but the, time was hardly ripe Kr it, 9nd the invention came to no greet import- nnce. _ 7 _ .' ' M---“ss v I'm-d First During the Siege of An!- werp in Elizabethan Days. It would seem that the first appearance of mines in warfare was during the siege of Antwerp in Eli- zabethan days, when the Dutch des- troyed several Spanish ships by means of Boasting kegs ?rgunposydtr. annoyed. The English used what was term- ed a catamaran at, Calais and Bon- logne in 1801. It was a he" , agar or cone-shaped bout “mica with powder that t1osted jun; awash and was towed towards the vessel to be EARLY SI‘BM ARISE MINES. HEALTH? ‘I'hc- Care of the “air. , dipusity. Illf SHNIIAY mllllll.l.lim Lesson m. The Call of Gideon. meIg. 6. 11-40. Golden Text, Verse 11. Bat under the oak which is in Ophrah.--This is an- other instance of a. sacred tree par- ticularly used on a great occasion. Gideon was beating out wheat in the winepresa.--A moat unusual proceeding, as the wine was pressed out frequently in the inner cleft of a rock arranged in the nature of a winepress, whereas wheat was threshed out on a high place as in- dicated above. 13. Oh, my lord, it Jehovah is with us. why then is all this: befallen us? --The angel of the Lord came with an assuring greeting, "Jehovah is with thee." Gideon was too devout to repudiate this statement. How- ever, he was too sorely distressed not to question it, and he asks, "If Jehovah is with the Israelites, why does he not reveal himself as he did to the men of old I" The greatest revelation always in the memory of the Israelites was the fact that Je- hovah brought the Israelites up out of Egypt. Gideon could not with- hold the expression that Jehovah, who was with the children of Israel in Egypt, seemed now to be deliver- ing them. into the _hand_of Midian. 16. And Jehovah said unto him, Surely I will be with thee, and thou shalt smite the Midiunites as one mam-Again Jehovah pays no at- tention to the wand of Gideon. His remonstrance is in vain. It matters little how poor and lowly he is. m came of I. good family and had the essential characteristics for leader- ship. In Gideon is another illus- tration of the fact that God is no respecter of persons and that the tg"iihg,.'1t', and worthy will find u favor, ttpmatter what their con- dition ip lite happens ttbe. 33. Then tll the Miditnites and the Amalekitea and the children of the east assembled themselves to- gether.--Not only was Gideon to face one horde of invaders. but all of the heathen on that side of the To hide it from the Midianiges.-- Everything which the Israelites possessed was in grave danger of being taken by the enemy. Under the invasion of the Canaanites, Is- rael's native law could be adminis- tered only in the extreme south- cast, between ltamah and Bethel, where, as we found in the lesson of January 3, the palm-tree of Debor- ah stood. In the day of Gideon the Midianites swept south from the plain of Esdraelon, so that the use of the threshinirfioors was impossl ble. They pushed so far that the Israelites had to hide themselves even at Ophrah. From the plain of Esdraelon a, succession of open plains lead out, connected by easy passes. It is the widest avenue into both Samaria and Judma. and makes connection also with the plain of Sharon. 12. Thou mighty man of valor.-- Gideon was not in a. particularly good mood; to think that he, a man of valor-that is, a strong and ac- tive man--iihould have to hide him- self practically in the cleft of a. rock in order to thresh out a. little wheat was almost as much as a hardy, strong young man could stand. The angelic visitor implied in his greet- ing that Gideon was not only a strong and brave man, but that he also was a devout man, a man of valor in the full sense. Go in this thy might, and save Israel from the hand of Midian: have not I sent theel-There is no account taken of the complaint of Gideon. There is no time to argue the matter. Words are of little im- portance. Action is what is de- manded. Gideon is made to feel immediately that he has the power to go and save Israel from the hands of the Miditsnites. This puts an entirely different phase on the questiqn. .- - _ -- _ 16. Oh, Lord, wherewith shall I save Israel f-The thought occurs to Gideon at once, however, that he is a young man of very low origin. His family is not only the poorest in the tribe of Mannsseh. but he himself is the very least in his father's house. 14. And Jehovah looked upon him. Here the statement ia direct-not the angel of Jehovah, but Jehovah. Gideon's eyes are open to the real import of the message that is com- ing_to him. It comes direct from This photo which has just been received from Constantinople, shows the Turkish High Priest, Sheik-Ul- Islan proclaiming the Holy. War m front of the Mosque of Faith. The head of the Mussulman faith is shown reading the declaration of war, surrounded by Mussulman dignitaries. INTERNATIONAL LESSON. JAN l'AIH' I7. V'V High Priest of Mussulman Faith Declaring a Holy War TORONTO The British Government in the view of the London Statist, “has provided itself, through the great loan, with the means of finanaing the war until Midsummer, at all events. Perhaps in no respect is the loan more satisfactory than that so many small people have brought forth their savings to pay for their allotments; very many, in- deed, paying for them, not by cheque, but in actual cash.” 'Wen are always late. I have waited here since 6 o’clock for my husband to come, tind it is now 7.30." "At what hour were you to meet him I" asked'the womtn who had joined her. "Ah 5 o'eloek." we can be quite sure. that we are going towards a world entirely dif- ferent from the world to which we have been accustomed. There is going on throughout what we have been accustomed to call the civilized world a destruction of property which is puite unparalelled. That means the world will be bitterly poor, and there .will be a. serious amount of work tole done in bring- ing us hack into the position which Eve occupied before the end of ulv." 36. And Gideon said unto God.--- The test which Gideon puts to God in this paragraph (verses 36-40) is a most striking proof of the faith which the people of the Old Testa, ment had in their God. If he was the true God, he would show him- self in some way, particularly at a time of so great crisis. The particu, larity with which this test is des- cribed by the Hebrew writer shows us how great weight the ohronicler put upon the incident, and also is evidence of the belief which Gideon himself had, that if he was to go out into the conflict he should go out entirely as the messenger and in the control and under the guid- ance of God. Addressing the recent annual meeting of his shareholders, the chairman of an important London industrial company had this to say: "There is only one thing of which valley intended to make a concert aggingt the children of Isrel. . And encamped in the valley of Jezreel.--The word used here for valley means "deepening." It is the same as the Scotch expression "vale." It is a. valley as one looks into it from above, and not a valley as one might stand below and look over an extensive plain running away from the hills far off to an- other rise of hills. The "deepen- ing" or “vale,” is a wide avenue running up into mountainous coun- tries. So we read of the vale of Hehron. the vale of Elah. of Ajalon, of Jezreel. These invading armies were not going to meet the Israel- ites on the western border of the plain-of Esdraelon by the river Kishon, but they were going to at- tack them more in the mountainous country and put them to disadvan- tage by dividing their forces and disposing of them piecemeal. Israel, therefore. had to muster not on Mount Tabor, but at Gilboa. It is interesting to note that the Midinn- ites in their battle against Gideon took up practically the same posi- tion as the Philistines did in their battle with Saul. M. And he sent messengers throughout all hunatmeh.--Ass soon as he was sure of his own people, he sent the Word everywhere. He par- ticularly. however, sent messengers unto Asher, and unto Zebulun, and unto Naphtali; and they came up to meet them. They all came up to- geeher-as will appear afterward, a formidable army of thirty-two thou.. sand men. And Abiezer was gathered toge- ther after him.--This was his own tribe. That his people, who knew him as belonging to a poor family and of humble origin, rallied to him at. once must have been a, sign of great encouragement and, doubt- less, a real indication that Jehovah would be With him. -And they passed ovor.---They im- mediately entered the confines of the Israelites. 34. But the Spirit of Jehovah came upon Gideon; and he blew a irtunpet.---Although the tribes of Israel were scattered and working independently, they could be girth- ered together at a time of crisis. The blowing of the trumpet, how- ever, was directed to the people of Gideon's own tribe. He wanted to be sure of them first. Afterward Gideon "geiiniiis"iris"irirete to all the neighboring tribes, to give warning of danger _and to call assistance. Subscribers to a War Loan A Frank Prophecy. Bob-"TUt boy of yours is a fine, tall lad, Jack; you should be proud of him." "Ac"I ain’t, though. Bdr--"No, haw’s that t" "Nr-- "Why, he in 18 inches tuner than I am, und his mother imGta on cut- ting hiss tron-era down to tit me." There is an ancient legend that the lake disappears whenever its waters claim the life of a human be- ing. That was the case at the last previous disappearance of the wa- ter. On a. certain Shrove Tuesday, nine young boys were drowned in Canterno Lake. Their distracted parents cursed the waters of the lake, and then a crater fifteen feet in diameter swallowed up the wa. ter with fearful and unearthly gur- gling. Fire spouted from the hole, and from the depths of the earth came a, mysterious rumbling. The entire lake bed we: strewn with tish, and the boat which had gone down with the boy: we; swallowed up bv the enter. "Perhaps you cams.” go some day," said his aunt, "but you should learn all about your mm wonderful and beautiful country before you visit the strange lands over the s'eas."#Yuut:hs‘ Compan- ion. "What a strange house!" broke in Molly. "Yes," said Aunt Gertrude. "it is very old, and is of the kind com- mon in those mountains. low and hemily built. Between the little windows upstairs you can see three curious designs. They are the coats of arms of the three cantons or states that were the beginnings of the present republic of Switzer- land, just as the thirteen colonies were the beginning of America. The great bulge below the windows is the big oven, where all the cook- ing is done. Over the houses farther up the street you can see one of the mountain peaks, which is always covered with snow. And it is a curious thing that beautiful flowers grow beside the mountain road, even within a few feet of the snow itself." It appears that this same pheno- menon has occurred several times in the history of the place; the last time was about 220 years ago. At that time the farmers had begun to till the bed of the lake, and had brought it to a high state of culti- vation, when suddenly the water re- turned; and as if to recompense the people for the loss of their crops, the fish came back also. “I wish that I could gu to the AlrP,"_said Kenneth. In .hneient Legend of the Little Lake of Cantorno. An unusual occurrence that has much interested the se':entific men recently happened a: Fumune. Pcaly. The picturesque little lake of Canterno suddenly disappeared. All the water retreated into a but- ton-less pit in the middle of the lake, and left the whole area ab- solutely dry "Tell us abodt it," urged the children. Aunt Gertrude was an artist who had been on a, long trip to Europe, and when her nephews and nieces visited her, there was nothing they liked so well as to look through her big sketch-book and have her tell them the stories about the pictures. This time they had shown special interest in the drawing of a street in a mountain village, where two boys were driving a fhsek of guats up to the door of one of the quaint houses. "That was in the Alps." said Aunt Gertrude, "and the little vil- lage is on the. road that the great Napoleon built through the. Simplon Pass and over the mountains more than a. hundred years ago. Tie, boy with the stick is driving his goats from house to house, to let his customers have goat's milk according to their needs, just as the milknmn drives round his Wagrm in this country.' The other boy, with a basket. is also delivering parcels from the village store. The clothes that the boys wear, and even their shoes. are made at home." Aunt Gertrude laughed, and said that she would. g Young Folks 6w ssMQW A I l "ISA PPr',.utI.NG I. l Kh' In the A his. God In Not Tindlrtise. but He is most certainly inexorable. Sin is not visited by divine wrath, but it is most certainly punished by divine justice. Days of vengeance have passed forever, but days of judgment still appear. What, im deed, has the year 1914 been but such a day? Deeply have the nu. tione trinned in their dealings with one another. For forty years they have envied, hmd, deceived. plot- ted, armed, threatened, ttltTd: Not one trace of generosity, ro- thorhood, tredt-alttteauion, even the ordinary decade. of "and” mor- In the deeper spiritual sense, how ever, these words of our text, are as true to-day as ever. and never be- tore so impressive perhaps as they are at this very moment. Taken literul‘n. :1.is. hiv"n " ruught languaqc of t"? l 'hr-t can find little acceptamo ', war awe. In spite of the easy pcecsmption with which the kings and priests of Fur rope are expecting God to give them victory in liattlewby whlnh they frankly mean bring death and destruction to their enemies-we nu longer think of God as a conqueror who treads down the people in his anger and pours out their life blood on the earth. Love and not but: pity and not wrath, forgiveness and not vengeance-thee we regard to- day as the true attributes of God. If we think otherwise it is because we ourselves are base and thus guilty of the unpardonalrle sin of degrading the Deity to the level of our own passions. "I trod (hm n the prophss in mine; anger. and l [mural out their life! blood on the earth . . . For the day of vengeance “as in my heart, and!, the year of my redeemed is :-:nno."l ---Itusiah, lxiii., 4. a. I "Mamma," said Elsie. “I wish I had a real baby to wheel in the tro- cnrt.” "Why i" said the mother. "You have your doll, haven't you l" "Yes. but the dolls are always get- ting broke when it tips over." If l9l4 Was the Year of Judgment Shall Not ion; Be the Year of Redemption? “The missus says we've got to evonomize. so we've to have mar. garine at meals in the kitchen." "Doesn’t she have it, then .?" "Not her. She says it doesn‘t suit her digestion. But there's no- thing wrong with her digestion. We know that. For as often as not we send her up the margarine and have the butter ourselves." A Hutch Clone Quarters With a Ihllmos. F It is years since I first shot one of these survival: from prehistoric times, my: I writer in the Field, but even now, when l gaze at his horn as it boldly protrudes from the wall of my den, the thrill comes back almost as vividly u when I first caught sight of his slate-gray bulk agamst a pale background of short grass. The two serum: met. "Dues this war they're talking so much about make much difference to you?” It wee our third day on the plains when my gunbearer pointed out I rhinoceros about 150 yards distant. He was apparently fast asleep. I studied the surroundings carefully, and selecting a small bush for my final cover. began to stalk him from behind. Moving slowly and can- tiously, I reached the bush, which was fifty yards from the sleeping animal, quite easily. Then I moved out a few yards to get a clear shot, sat down, aimed where the neck joined the shoulder, and fired. I pulled down, and only hit him in the leg. '1 Luue nearer, down the wind, an}: mince 1s lolllenn'eu. It My " and after looking through the . Iqug t Bo ttel" , to p:Tf.ectiol 1 1 made u i d that he I! m we) bad to discard It "ul/ gasses, p my m n For it re both comfortable and was stone dead. Then I saw an tractive in a aranee ear twitch. Nevertheless, I be- . ppe . . lieved that he was as good as done Pads and Pam-ire. for; but it was well to be cautious. I a ' tl , and I crawled on mv stomach to n an ""T,'tta- popu ar M“ ... . . _ . _ ”Igneous ago (more “(T9 mam t. sy.ith.in thirtv tvtyxiit of hm]. I oou ker maidens, and every one wh I distinctlv lee his. Ivitk.ed little eyes. ( it commented on the health M t He was lying with hm nose down, gownL-mcuureU, to be are. knees bent under him, and "9”}st muddled on the frock m vulnerable part protected by .htst l Quaker maid. New that wide Kr horn. There we lay, each waiting ', ed frocks, with nnrrow bodices ., for the other to make the 1.ret.ite be coming gradually in {my move. He could not smell or see perhaps the Quaker custumo me; but he knew there was so.riT-ll:'l'i.'li'l'e' same consideration _ thing wrong, and only wanted aldesigner has already featured it sign to get the direction for his} Have you seen the drum In charge. iT.here js une. . It. is small aim! " Off he went-away from me, I am glad to say-“M, astonishing speed. I heed again; but my shot only made him run the faster, and he disusp- pelted over a gentle undulation. I followed him up, and was able to give him another bullet. He lay in some rather long grass, and was so quiet that I concluded he was dying. After five nervous minutes nf this suspense, there came an accidental cough from my gurrbearer. With surprising quickness, the huge pachyderm ruse and charged like a streak of lightning. As I had a single-barrel gun, I knew that it 1 did not stop him with the first bul- let, he would have me; but I held my gun straight, and as he came. I shut him through the chest right into the heart. I leaped up as I fired, and the mun-mums beast crumpled up at my feet, and squeal» ed like a shot hare. He was a very old brute l his horn was much worn, and his flanks were badly warred from fighting. I have been in more than one tight curner. but I shall never forget the five minutes I lay and watched that wounded rhino. “THE DAY OF nlliliLWfi" Looking Out for Thasnrselses. IN A TIGHT CORNER. I Pads and Furies. In an cperetta. popular F"tt,t {seasons ago there were many Qua ker maidens, Ind every one win , an a it commented am the beauty of tim, gowmr---rncdiiied, to be sure. lur still modelled on the trock of Ill, ”Junker maid. Now that wide skill ':ed frocks, with narrow bodices NM“ ito be coming gradually in ftcrCV, (perhaps the (Junker costume wi: Such at least shun” hr ullr prayer, and. God hehming UR, ml)‘ resolve. as the old Var o? din ulur passes into the new )onr vi prnvw isel "The day of venm‘nnru" p, still with us. but if we be patient. malt.“ and “not unfaithful to tir, hedvenly vision," 1915 may be wade to be "the year of the redeemed." WV. Jan "when Dolmen. But this is nut, all of the pr..phw-i For "the (lay of \engelncv.“ sax the ancient prophet. marks the c w, ing of "the year of (GN d's) rode 'ttt ed." Out of all this misc!) a'. bloodshed shall there not cum“ 'tc' an abhorrence of force. Stu-I a [lured o! Holt-urn. Inch tt quickcning of mmpnwiu l and brotherhood It; the world liar never felt before? And man Hit-r: not come, as the due ensures-H "I 1 this awakening of the spirit of m , will and as a fitting mmpeuvaai _ _ for the lanes suffered and the an. , nies endured in this greatest ff a') was, the establirhment of p _ ' fore?“ more? If nativn shail 't longer lift up sword uglinet nntimL neither learn war any mar“: if ' i, deuce shall no more be heard in any land. wasting nor destruction with in the borders of any ccsnt;nent: if people aha-M clasp hands with per" tlt in one great world-wide bond of motherhood. than nu." this present ooMict, for all its horror, have not been in "in? For sever-l your: sleeve: heve not been ot especial importance. 1brwt, of them have been cut on kimonu 1imsv--aod no they were no sleeves atall, and peahapes that in why they were not important. But this year we have I cut-unddried sleeve Ur del with again. Br their sleeves you may lmow them. That bu been true of the fro_ch of to-day. 'Do be sun, the new evening gowns have no sleeves, But this, ah- uenoe of sleeves is u characteristic of the style Is any other sleeve de, tail woukl be. The new evening ho, diem we cut in We inn 1 1M clasp on the s'huuMet max; a jewel- led buddy or o‘asp or under an tvrtificial flower; or, else they are cut equue and held over tlw simul- den with ietselled bands "r Aland! of tueifiehrl Bowers. ality. has appeared in Hwir ('t-n: menia‘. political and ttrr.inl l' L. tions. And, bchold, the day judgment h." a. Cums upon l'um Their sins blue fourl them ur- Selfishness has [naught misery an hatred drath as they haw my done before'. And thewi-re com" the crowning horror of PPupi" tmdden down in anger and the: life blood poured out on the can}: But thisis not all of the pruphna-y For "the day of vengeance," FN', the Ancient prophet. marks the c ml ing of "the year of (Gal's) rode 'm ed." Out of I"! this wisely a; bloodshed shall there not com" sur' The most wonderful thing abuut Britain', Chancellor of the Exche, quer is his cheerfulness and couti- deuce at all times. The “one the outlook, the more cheery he he comes. Someone once asked Pun how it was he always managed t ' 'w 50 cheerful. “Don't you have al. troubles?" -the questioner asked “Heaps and heaps of them." Mr Lloyd George briskly replird; "but we're not here to mope and (Tr We're here to get over the would "A'. and there is nothing like cheerfl neu for giving you a 'leg up '. There vou have one of the .w 'y"s of the Chancellor's power for “wk But in the day time the Home is . regulation Ileeve wt into A regal-(ion armhold. And it is 1m: and rather sun; and tusually " I ea well over the hand. Summimw a bishop sleeve ie usmi-one full alrove the wrist, gathered into a litt.le wristband. Sometimes. too, ' f course, the kimono. arrangemrm Hf the bodice is followed. ll " lwm. brought no nearly to psrfectim 1"..21 it is too bad to discard it entire', For it is both comfortable and .:'. "active in appearance. Have you Been the drum muff There is one. It is wr.arl and 'lrm shared. and it is worn about m nee on a chnin of go'd gulluuu. I should be Worn with a military braided costume. In spite of the very lung mp which is without doubt the (Pain of the “inter models there are mun tery short, Empire waists. Tin are generally beaming. aha well-liked by the wearer. These m ones end almost under the arms. There are some interesting 1m ported an” made of big shawls v! steamer rugs, with fringe around the bottom mud edging the cape Ner' tion that falls over the sleeves. m- sometimes edging the wide coil”; instead. Beaver is used on brown broad, cloth with good effect. (will) a greater contrast tturn tlust bvtuwu beaver and dark brown hruadolnrb. is desirable between fur and fabric. but these two go well together. Ornamental hooks and eyes black and white celluloid. are l on some of the new models. Lot d GeorreU Cheerful no». The tNntttsimstg Sleeve. iyiffe" Bi an” m if I! Herman and s gr future tn wrninng u u they did CamcsWiIi Dairymen C All) T0 It was men; I Mr. C “mini cul g the me ll‘i the m Dairy dl In (A tkrtt le Ade TURKS S Mud tt pate

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