v. k. [I " "That's just tho point. I think I could win, ttll right, but ever after she’d have tho opportunity to remind no of the millionaire she could have married. I've decided for my own hummus that perhaps Pd better lot him hn her." . _ [ ' 'You're foolish, man. If Ilse loves {on and is u sensible u I think the a ty an ,in ter without pqm.†Uni-g Discretion. 'Wee dropped out of the race for Mnbel’s hand." “You have? Why? "Mr nearest competitor is . mm with millions I think the loves me, but I’ve decided to withdraw." t?pitloek.--To mark" out a line on the [round with the point of I pick. "p.---' trench formed by men working from the bottom of the trench and constantly extending the end tmrdl the enemy. Itevetment.--An, method of mak- ing earth stand at a steeper slope than the mum] one. - Gntrion.-An open cylinder of brush- wood, sheet iron, ete., and for revet- ting. Embrasure.--A channel through the pupa! of I work through which a [on is fired. "seine..-' long bundle of brush- wood. tied up tightly, used for road- making, etc. Fold in tho groand.-.A slight hol- low eluted by the regular lie of the [round being broken by I rise or de- pnuion. Dorttrn.-A channel or gully formed by the action of water. Countersettrp.--The Orpe' of- the ditch of a work farthest from the punt. Abnttirc---An obntacle formed of trees or branches of trees pickcud to the ground, with their points tode the enemy. Banquette.-The place upon which tht men stand to fin over a par-pet. Many Military Terms Are Not Gen- cull, Understood. Although used every day in the del- criptions of happenings " the front, many military terms are not gener- ully understood. Mere is a selection from the lesser-known military terms: Grazing hre.--Fire which is parallel, or nearly so. to the Induce of hte ground. Dead trround.--Ground which an not be covered by Bre. Beaten zone.---The belt of ground beaten by a cone of fire. Entitnde fire.--Mre which sweep- a target from a funk. Now destiny seems about to decree a happier state of things. Instead of the memory of an ancient crime, in- stead of the oppression which has been exercised to keep Poland a sub- ject land, a new nation is seen aris- ine, an old aspiration is being fulfill- ed. It is a good omen for the future well-being of the human race. Since the war Poland has suffered, it is said, to an even greater degree than Belgium. Denied, as they were, an impelling voice in the events out of which the war grew, the Polish people have had to bear the brunt of terror. Men of international re- nown who had retired to country homes for the declining years of life have seen everything swept away. Some have been driven to cellars where the only food left would, in normal times, have been regarded " hardly fit for domestic animals. " land has drunk the cup of bitterneaa‘ to the dregs. l In all the changes which have up- set Russian otrieiaidom within the year past liberals have been replacing the older autocrats. The enemies of the duma were in power when the war was started. The friends of the duma and of social reform are now in control. Democracy has a better chance in Russia at the present mo- ment, according to competent ob- servers, than at any moment since the revolution. The re-establishment of Poland in an integral part of the pro- gram for a rejuvenated Russia. The histories of Poland and Russia have been closely connected since the earliest times. Somewhat the same inituenees which lapped the sove- reignty of Poland aided in establishing an autocracy in Russia. The empire of the Czar is now in the process of a social regeneration. Reform is less revolutionary than it was during the years immediately following the establishment of a constitution, but it is said to be no less thorough- going. Whatever the ism of the war, ap- parently a better day in dawning for the despoilod nation of eentrnl Eu- rope. Germany has dready moane- ed its desire ti, so. the Kihgdom of Poland revived, and in this matter Austria is an to follow the advice of iv, any. Powerful influences are at work which should make for an atone-one Poland. No one ean now say what might lave happened if the course of history had been dilermtt. Still tire d sound reaaon to think that a free nation lying between Russia, Ger- many and Austria might have elimin- ated by its very existence many of the rivalries and eoMieta of inter- national ambition which aeem to lie behind the present war. In a certain sense Europe may now be paying for the ancient crime of Poland. The in- ternational sins of the fathers may be visited upon the children of the third and fourth generations and be- yond. Polish kingdom. A reconstituted Poland catch- the imagination u a valid Mmph of jug. lice and right. The Ilium strx-U of the Polish pooplo for nation] NOTES AND COMMENTS BATTLEFHELD TERMS. I Most cases are seen in winter. It iis more common among the children I of the very poor, who live in crowded l tenements, or among children in hos- Ipita]: and institutions. The disease lvaries greatly in its symptoms and leourse, depending on the state of the g patient at the onset, the nature of thy , other physicel trouble he may be luf- ‘ bring from, and his native powers of resistance. It isn't always the loser in u pu- gilistic contest that gets the swelled l Broncho-pneumonia in infants and , young children is a very serious mat- Aer. It may be uncomplicated with lany other disorder; but often it ap- 'pears during an attack of measles, lwhooping cough, or scarlet fever; it l does not often attack a perfectly well ichild. It is most common in the first i year of life, and lean so up to the fifth 'year; after that it is not often seen. (Babies who are subject to digestive i troubles will often have broneho. ipneumonia after an acute attack of igutric or intestinal disorder, predis- lpoaed thereto by their weakened re- , plating powers. When the "acute congestive type" attacks very young infants the ill- ness comes on with startling sudden- ness, the temperature sometimes goes to 105 deg. or 106 dett., the pulse is rapid,--as high perhaps as 180,--and death may occur in a few hours The younger the child, the more serious is the outlook, but any Baby suffering from broncho-pneumonia needs the most careful nursing. It should be in a large, quiet, well-ventilated room, under the constant care of one adult at s time, who will carry out exactly the treatment that the physician in charge orders-Youth', Companion. Fever, which is very seldom preced- ed by a chill, in one of the flrrrt symp- toms. The fever rises and falls for days, and sometimes for weeks, and reaches its highest point daily in the afternoon or evening. There is us- ually a dry, hacking cough, a very rapid pulse, and quickened respira- tion. The little patient is generally very much prostreted, and does not want to be disturbed. In severe at- tacks, especially if the child was in poor physical condition at the begin- ning of the illness, there may be con- vulsions or delirium. 3 Arthritis deformans is a chronic affection; sometimes it appears to be of nervous origin. At any rate, there is constant evidence that worry, grief, f and mental fatigue play a part in its 'occurrence. The principal symptoms ‘are pain and stiffness in the various Ijoints as they become affected one I after the other. The small joints, ‘ those of the fingers and toes, especial- ( 1y, are first attacked. The acute {symptoms subside end then return, ( and with each return the deformity l becomes more marked. Persons who suffer from this disease are always "below par," and every- thing must be done to improve their "reneral condition and to maintain their general health. The disease does not directly menace life. A warm and dry climate, with plenty of fresh air and sunshine, and with complete absence of care and worry, are the ideal conditions for the patient. Where they cannot be obtained, approach them as nearly as possible. The pa- tient should be careful to avoid any chilling of the surface of the body, and his diet should be nourishing and, abundant. Medical treatment by) means of hot air, certain baths, If electricity is benetieinl in many cases†Women suffer from arthritis de. formans more often than men. The disease does not often appear in early life, but usually begins between the ages of thirty-five and fifty-five. If it afrliets children, it is generally be- cause of bad hygienic conditions, in- sufficient food, or exposure. The same evils may also account for the fact that it is of such frequent occur- renee among the poor. This is a chronic and progressive disease of the joints. that impairs or destroys their usefulness and often produces serious deformity. Arthritis deformans has afflicted the human race as far back as we can trace it, for archaeologists have found bones deformed by it in the ancient tombs of Egypt. The disease was once believ- ed to be closely related to gout and rheumatism; but that opinion is no longer held. There is apparently a predisposition in some constitutions to gout, or rheumatism, or arthritis deformans; but the three diseases are distinct. Goldy’s mistress keeps on the floor a clean newspaper, which serves Is Goldy's dining table. The feast was spread when Goldy walked in and gently placed his little mouse right in the middle of it. Whatever may have been his Ino- tive, or whatever conversation passed One day not long ago Goldy went out into the highway, found a little field mouse, and brought him home in his mouth. We Guest. _ Goldy received his name some four- teen years ago, when he was a fudry yellow kitten. Now he is e big, hand- some eat, with long, soft fur, almost onnge in color. He keeps his face and hands washed, steps high, and carries his tail jauntily. He is too well fed to be a good hunter, and he never catches mice. m B [il ht) Gli 'ith 'ef Wm†$tiii,,Mii,r)) -A. 1rgii we) (may, tJ),?,,",; . ttieof (iaitlil sife2iil Broneho-Pneummia. A rthritin Deformans. HEALTH contented he has outiived his uc (units. "That landlord is certainly an en- terprising feller." "How now?" "He has installed outside roller towels that run the full length of a three-story hotel. Guests on every hoor can lean out of the windows and wipe their hands." "But why have the towels out- side , This barn roof was designed and built by a farmer. If the details here given do not seem clear ask any neighborhood carpenter to lay out the circle and drive the stakes for you. It is difficult to make the details any clearer than this, but no doubt this will be sufficiently explanatory. After the desired thickness has been reached bolt or nail all together fast. Use spikes generously or bolts or both. Either or both may be made to serve the purpose just as well. They pull out the nails "toed" into the first thickness and lift the hoops into place. Take pine boards six inches wide II. The Drunken Ben-hadnd and an inch thick and bend them along (Verses 16-21), the curved mark, setting them edge- wise to the ground and hailing them 16. And they went out " noon-. lightly to the stakes by "toeing"i Men engaged in drunken revelry are them in with nails driven my in no condition to meet the foe. (Com- through the stake and then into the' pare Dan. 6. 1-4). boards. Any size boards may be usedl .17., Ben-hadad sent out--Even in for this purpose. The Ix6s were used his drunken stupor he is aware that in this barn. After this first circle is something unusual has happened. made put more boards on the inside,) 18. Take them tttive-Whether they thus making a second thickness, but had come for peace or for war they being careful not to have the joints; were .to be captured. The more he coming at the same place in any two! was dispossessed of his mind the less thicknesses. Add more boards until he wat' m control fr.f his words. the desired thickness or strength is. 19. Ty' â€my whieh “'le them touched and nailing the pieces lightly: --That 18. the two hundred trnd thirty- together, using Just enough sixes. In '-, two young men who went out to be- the Johnson County barn the hoops gm the battle were followed by the were six inches thick. :seven thousand soldiers, who came After the desired thickness has been upon the scene to increase the confu- reached bolt or nail all together fast.) Mon of the unexpected attack. With this last stake as the top or apex of the circle and with the two stakes first driven the curve of the barn can be drawn out on the ground. This is not an exact semi-circle, as the bows in this barn were almost perpendicular several feet above the foundation. With the curve drawn out on the ground, stakes should be driven along it at intervals to hold the boards when bent into place. To make these hoops the barn build- er figured out how high he wanted the haymow to be. He believed twenty- two feet was high enough and as the barn was thirty-live feet wide he drove two stakes thirty-five feet apart on a flat piece of ground. The next step was to run a line between those stakes and at the exact middle point to put in a small stake. From this centre stake he ran another line at exact right angles to the first. He measured twenty-two feet out on the second line away from the centre stake and drove another stake. mow to the roof. These big hoops were placed three feet four inches apart on centres. l The little mouse was unhurt, and after recovering from his fright he _ began to eat the dinner. Nibbling (, daintily at the food, he tasted first one i thing and then another. "Oh, that's so the rain can wash When a man beriome, The barn referred to is in Johnson County, Kansas. It is sixty feet long and thirty-five feet wide. The founda- tion floor contains stunchions for cows and is built of limestone taken from the hillside the barn is on. Above the foundation is the haymow. This was made by standing nineteen great half- hoops on the foundation and putting sheet iron on them. That made a mow without an inch of waste space, as no cross braces were needed, and it was all clear space from the floor of the A Circle Drawn on the Ground and Marked by Makes Makes the Form. (The following article, taken from the Kansas City Star, will be found to be very interesting to farmers who are interested in saving space and providing convenience throughout in this construction of the curved roof barn. A correspondent of that paper asks for information regarding its construction from a description given in a previous 'tssue.--Ed.) CURVED BARN ROOF SUPPORTS. However, with apologies Goldy’s mistress carried the little mouse out- doors and gave him his liberty. So, thanks to Goldy, one little field mouse had an amazing adventure to tell his family when he reached home; he may even have bragged about his su- perior coolness and courage when in- vited out to dine by a' big yellow cat. Perhaps he advised all young mice to be brave in the presence of danger.-- Youth’s Companion. between him end his guest, this much is certain: Goldy settled himself com- fortably on "the floor at n convenient distance from his guest, winked first with one eye and then with the other and began to sing. A Bow for I Wagon Bow Burn-in the Making. an More Enterprise. the-roughly Some people are healthy because no self-respecting germ would so near Stella-Why do they put bells on the coWs? Bellac-rt gives warning so you can run away from them. "Yes," said the orderly. "He thinks he knows who done it." “He’s going back, air," replied the orderly. "Going back!†said the visitor in surprised tones." To the orderly the visitor "said.. "That's a bad case. What are you going to do with him?" Back to the Front. Passing through a military hos- pital. a distinguished visitor noticed a private in one of the Irish regi- ments who had been terribly injured. 20. They slew every one his 'tttut- It was comparatively easy for these sober young men to acquit them- selves well in the fight. The Syrians tted-CA vast army flee- ing before a comparatively few pur- suem. 16. And they went out " noon-. Men engaged in drunken revelry are in no condition to meet the foe. (Com- pare Dan. 5. 1-4). Who shsll begin the battle?-lrhat is, Who shall strike first? Ahab might have remained in the fortified city and for a long time warded off the besiegers. To rush out into the open, however, and engage the unsus- pecting attackers, was more promis- ing of success. 14. The young men of the princes of the provineetr--The picked young men of the princes, who would be marked as valorous and discreet. 13. A prophet eame--When Elijah complained that he alone of all the prophets was left, he did not mean that all the prophets except himself had been killed. He meant that through fear of death they had stop- ped prophetsyintt. Many an unknown prophet there was who, like Eldad or Medad, came to prominence at the op- portune moment. In the pavilions - Similar to "booths" (Gen. M. 17; Lev. M. 42; Jonah 4. 5, etc.) or "tabernaeles" (Lev. 23. 34). These "booths" were temporary structures erected of branches of trees, as at the Fft of Tabernacles. T Bet-In the Hebrew the sentence stops with this word. wd'he words yourselves in array are"added. The margin reads, "Plaee the engines." As this some word not, used in Each. 4. 2, is followed by the noun "batter- ing-rams," it is supposed that the command given by Ben-hadad to the soldiers was to set or place the bat- tering rams over against the gates of the city. The Septuagint version reads: "Build a stockade, and they set a stockade against the city." 12. He was drinking-Ben-had) was so full of confidence that he was giving a banquet to his allies, the neighboring kings (see verse I), in honor of the victory he felt sure he would win. 11. Let not him that girdeth on his tsrmor--Ahab answers with a proverb according to'the Oriental propensity. The king who has won a victory, and hence has taken off his armor, has the right to boast; not he who has a vie- tory to win, and hence is just putting on his armor. Verse 10. The dust of Samaria-. Ben-hadad boastfully declared that he would bring so great an army into Samaria that if each man thereof took up but a handful of dust, the whole of Samaria would be carried away. Lesson 1Hr.-Defeat Through Drunk. enness (Temperance Lesson), 1 Kings 20. 1-21. G. T., Hon. 4. ll. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL _. The Young Men of the Princes (Verses 10-15). INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPTEMBER 19. The picture shows a German comm made in the open tteats behind my of the crosses regiment-l colon have been painted. Wise City Belle. BIG GERMAN CEMETERY BEHIND THE LINES TORONTO Searching for domestic happiness, he chose a bride who could give him nothing that could degire but her love. In middle age, when Francis Joseph and his Empress were just learning i It was hideous enough, yet it was 'merely another fetter added to those ‘of inheritance and fate which claimed ‘Francis Joseph in a bondage more ‘cruel than that of the most tortured and prosecuted patriot in his empire. His whole after life can be viewed as one struggle after another, conscious and subconscious, toward freedom of body and soul, in which he accepted the things which came as the. scourgings of God through which his eyes were to discern more clearly the path of truth and righteousness. Sorrow in every guise, compsnioned by dishonor and disgrace; disap- pointment in every form touching the ho'pes which were dearest, loss in ter- ritory and sovereignty, attended by humiliation the most deeply charged with anguish to the haughty Haps- burg mind-they broke his heart and bent his shoulders, but they liberated his spirit snd sent it forth chutened, sweetened and humbled, to seek com- fort snd solace in the love of his people. - f The young Emperor's companions were chosen with this end in view. Every temptation which evil women in the ply of the mother could place before him lay across his path. He was initiated into every weakness which corrupt men in the mother's pay could devise. But his mother, the Archduchess Sophia, had manoeuvered to have her son made Emperor merely as a future- head. She was to govern the empire, another Catherine the Great, . Marie Theresa, or a Queen Elizabeth. To employ every possible means to de- base and debauch this son and thus make him incapable of ruling was the deliberate plan of the mother, as ghastly a crime as a Nero's or a Bor- gia’s. "Oh, my youth, thou art forever lost to me," the boy exclaimed in a moment of realization of what his duty was. The divine right of kings to send liberty-loving subjects to the prisons or to the gallows had been instilled into the boy’s mind until he believed it to be as unaltersbly true as the tenets of his Catholic religion. Bought to Corrupt Him. A few months after the boy's eight- eenth birthday, Metternich fled from the country to save himself from the fury of the outraged people. The Emperor Ferdinand abdicated. Franc- is Joseph had a crown placed upon his head, the legacy which his father, the next heir after Ferdinand had re- fused to accept. One must not paiss judgment upon the Francis Joseph of to-day and the empire which is the expression of his own individuality without looking backward to both of them when he in 1848, a remote date to the present generation, celebrated his eighteenth birthday as a careless, light-hearted youth. True, the soldiers of the Rus- sian Czar were then in Hungary, in- vited there by Francis Joseph's uncle, the Emperor Ferdinand 1., in order to quell the revolution which Kossuth had started in the name of liberty, and the brave Hungarians were lay- ing down their lievs rater than sub- mit to Hapsburg tyranny. The dun- geons of Hungary and Bohemia, of Naples, Venice, Lombardy, and Tus- cany were full of men whose only crime was the determination to break the shackles of that same Hapsburg tyranny. The gallows were busy sending thousands more to death. But Prince Metternich was Prime Minister and the master in Vienna, and Francis Joseph, the boy of eight- een, had been reared to regard such things as of small consequence. Francis Joseph, Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, was eighty-five years old on Wednesday, August 18, and-he is completing the last months of a reign of sixty-seven years. Not for thirty centuries, since the great Rameses reigned in the land of the Pharaohs, also for sixty-seven years, has there been a sovereign who has been so long in actual possession of a throne. Not in the whole of the his- tory from the remotest days can there be found the record of a monarch who has been longer and more intimately acquainted with grief. He Is Now " Years of Age, and Mas Reigned For 67 Years. FRANCIS JOSEPH LONELY OLD MAN GRlEF AND GLOOM HAVE MARK ED HIS REIGN. .. .. His Empress. 'Murdered. 'HG-ttttft" The King‘s Wine. And whenever a pilgrim of Jesus Christ finds himself face to face with some exacting duty in the highway of the Lord it will be his wisdom to look about for the. springs of inspiration which the Lord of the way bu most surely provided. ' On the reverse side of every duty may be found a corresponding gift of grace. Every call of the Lord has its complement in spiritunl equipment. mu unficulty, at the bottom of which was a spring. Christian now went to the spring and drank thereof to re- fresh himself; and then he began to go up the hill." There is never nny hill where that spring may not be found. Whenever life's goings pus from the easy level to the steep grad- ient the Lord provides the refreshing spring. There are still waters just where He begins to lead me to the climbing and difficult “ways of righte- ousness." Samuel Rutherford used to say that whenever he found himself in the cellars of Minion he began to busy himself in looking for "He shall drink of the brook in the way."--" cx., 7. Every Call of the Lord Has Its Complement In Spiritual Equipment THE SPRING If Ttiii-iii-iii Msitor-Then the faet that I am asking you for the smaller one proves, at any rate, that I ttttt not mercenary. Mr. Gottrox-My dtustthtertr, young man, are both worth their weight in gold. “That's me right enough!†smiled the witty youth, " he slid into the seat. "But how did you know I was coming?" “I. this seat" engaged'." he naked politely. The stout woman looked up angrily. "Yes, it w." she smpped. I'm keep- ing it for a gentleman." A Much for Her. A certain suburban theatre was very full when the young men enter- ed. Presently he stopped beside a aomewhet stout Indy who was trying to occupy enough room for two. "Mindful even in the gloomiest hours of my high duties and my responsibil- ities for the destinies of the millions for whom I am unswenble to the Al- mighty." is the way Francis Joseph has described his daily life. He labors at his desk straight through the day, his frugal luncheon brought to his side, and continues in his advanced old age to be the servsnt of his people according to his own idea of the meaning of the phrase, with concentration of mind, thorough- ness in detail, and tuutrifitN, of personal comfort which no executive elected under republican form of government by the suffrage of the people could give in greater measure. i Royal marriages which the Emper- or fostered, that of Louise of Tumny ,with Frederick. now King of Saxony, land that of Louise of Belgium with Philip of Cobourg, produced scandals which rang around the world. A Lonely Old Man. Excepting for his brief holiday at ,Ischi, Francis Joseph passes all other ldays a lonely old man, walking up and I ,down monumental staircases in the gloomy, ancient palaces of Vienna nad Budapest, through brilliantly lighted anterooms filled with lackeys, hearing his steps echo over the polished floors, through dozens of corridors where he eneountertf none but his servitors looking from lofty windows into vsst stretches of park land where no one: may wander but himself, rising at dawn, the hour when revellers are I seeking their beds, in order to geti through the tasks connected with the governing of his subjects. I Franis Joseph’s only son, brilliant, accomplished, and fascinating, com- mitted suicide under circumstances, which degraded his name and deftuned his exalted position. to be friends, she was foully mur- dered by an Italian Anarchist. The only member of his family who commanded his respect and alection was his younger brother, the Arch- duke Max. As Emperor Maximilian of Mexico forty-eight years ago he was shot down like a dog by Porf1rio Dial, and his wife, Carlotta, whom Francis Joseph loved as a sister, has been a raving maniac ever since. the lines in Northern France. Not Macon-I7. was foully ttttrr- he bel On , ma cnap wno burns the candle at both ends may be cxttavuant. but it is cheaper than electric light, even lthen. In There new. Beta. Met Then what intilmlciee of divine friend- ship mult be calling the! Is it to be a long, long road'. Then what brooks, I shell tind by the way! The trouble ia, we see the hill and forget the spring. We take our task as a duty and not as a communion. And so life become: I statute and not a song. There in obedience but no de- votion. Yes, there in duty but no piety, which Means that we accept the hill and reject the spring. And yet the spring is there.' "No, every one that thireteth. come ye to the we- ters'." “He shall drink of the brook in the arAr."-atrr. J. II. In.“ " n unmet the spring. We take our task " a duty and not as a communion. And so life become: I mum and not a Bong. There is obedience but no de- van-u Tr, .. Every i It behooves the feminine mind to meditate upon the material to be lchosen for the vun gunrd tailleur of the autumn neuon. Don't let people bore you to death with their moss-covered anecdotes. Spring a few of your own old favor- ites. Mistretrts--Gonet. Why, the actually mail: a postcard to herself every night, so he'll be sure to all " the house next morning. Master-Norah seems quite gone on that letter carrier. Folldwin‘ the general trend of peanut fashions, come: now the chin- bow veil. In velour: de nines there are stripes and checks, one wonderfully soft and beautiful being a combina- tion showing up in blue striped with chanteuse. It is predicted that gray velour, trimmed with pipings cf white velvet, will be good and that some of the very exclusive models are of bat- tleship grey and navy blue. All shades of purple and mauve will be "votruey." Checks and plaids will be exploited by the fabric makers. There is a moat enticing new weave, which comes in dark red and green Scotch plaid. It it a heavy blanket or English cloth with camel’s hair finish. For long ooata it will be found exceptionally ttood, " the wildest dissipations of autumn storms and descending snows cannot injure its splendid stability. The dinner dresses and evening frocks cling to the idea of full skirts. Many are draped in wide plaits fuller in the back than in front. Others are arranged into Bounces, so rut as to give the suggestion of wide piaits. The full skirt looks fuller than it really is because of the long, narrow sleeves with which they are worn. The high boots play an important role in accenting this point. Leather boots are to be worn with the trottoir. while utin and velvet boots are to be rash, ionable for afternoon wear. The style of skirt is especially at- trnctive when made into One-piece dresses of "rtte,aabardine and other soft woolen meter-ink. With this style of frock worm is made close fitting by means of ne phits or soft shining over the hips It fills in full Bare About the knee. Tate“ also lends itself charmmgly to the full pbited and gored Skirts, Thin is ar-Htl, me where a deep ileum in made of one color, and cum- bined with another material for the body of the frock. One of the smart- est Ikirta of thin kind is a planed black and white cheek. The upper part of the skirt is fashioned of the checked material, giving an apron of. feet to the dress, while the wide, Iuh' iiGG is made it black tatfetts trouBerB. The soft, shimmering material is draped in soft folds in front and in back. It is full and hm st the sides giving the suggestion of Turkish have baa ell manor. he trams? will reach the hid! boot! which are to be all the - this fall. while the evening gown- and dinner frocks will escape the Bottr by two or two and a half inches The prettieat skirt: are fashioned in French um, Meta. charmeuse, net and all other soft materialtsfhnt are draped readily. pr' Groult, one of the 1 mg Frtneh hon-ea, haa created some new ideas for skirts that an mlly‘ charming and chic. In these he bl: incorporat- ed the wide shirt, thfehort skirt and the draped ekirt in one. One of his loveliest models is a black eharmruse. Wiktehirts the New Vogue. It and!!! to be seen whether or not women m to be "tufud with the fall tuition- in unit: and evening gowns, 0110 “my in -ie4--Mtiru are to be wide and (ac-W and are to be m’ .tsrrr'rtt" Im-thn they The eltnrt who burns the candle Love Will Find a Way. Fashion Hints We Alway- Do. lilo lendi itself Charmingly drink of the brook '. J. B. Jotrett, D.D, Shakespeare aid th as yet philosopher lure toothache patiem Gustav S rho Iwor Wainil heee on h tad his ad (bucum an: the Vilnyet God to the ' mu, on the Uruml km W but th, GERM AN FALSll-‘ll untamed by F n months' an! ttl prison at of $1. ago: Non STOPPED CHRISTIA: LEA Commodov director Ol charge of Ian! Bel title of my Itruction. in Pen-oz" ply to recel 3nd as ch: tormmntion fron Phys Enid to devote his a which hit M equal. The Em “even him of th: ntuchu him to The decision 1 to take chief o in Petrogrld on SAYS H.000 " " red the nation de The Grand D mous Viceroy of von IrorontV Nk'holn “drag communimtiou a no of his luborm yield- to his rec BRITISH In the in comm Empo the A duplu'll Grand Duke Ni the command o of the Chief DUKE NICHO IS SUP? Ire within little dist success in the Du would have In mom that: of the world. pet been covered, tl " gripe the Briti Robert Cecil in I I declared that the A: A dbqtateh from I Will be recalled that l ill. tuned, First La ulty, now Manor hamster, laid shot COMM changes that within a few miles of the Daraneiims. Within Little Affect All Th THE DARD. Ir, haul-Lender“ audition-l TT Tr " rh athern th uncemem hi " M deg BE ther " her [Midi showing D “I d It " ARMEN MASSACRE All ha th my: DER Force: tf " I: the till: Vit m ntl "