West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Oct 1915, p. 2

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y & l'& Cns t the 4,000 female students apâ€" proximately 600 have become _ sick nurses. â€" From Kocni'gsberg. which contributed the largest contingent of students, 1,057 out of 1,280 went to the front. Of technical students takâ€" ing part in the war Danzig supplied the largest proportion, 63 out of 72 students, or 90 per cent. | The students matriculated at the J Berlin University for the current | summer term of six months, or a | semester, numbered 8,016, compared | to 8,647 of last summer. In reality | only 2,300 male and female students | actually attend the university. In 1. Munich 5,701 students are matricuâ€" 6 lated this summer semester, of which | ; number 3,957 were granted leave of || absence to serve in the army or saniâ€" ) ¢ tary corps. t Thus far the mortality among the / t students of Germany has been as {ol~, g lows: Bonn, 2 lectors and 113 stuâ€" t dents; Freiburg, 3 adjunct professors, f # 8 assistants, and 117 students; Goerâ€" $ tingen, 7 lectors, 8 assistants, and 142 students; Heidelburg, 783 students; Jena, 112 studeni.. wi., . , "ludents;| One baby out a year old. Of the 4,000 proximately 600 nurses. â€" From contributed the | students, 1,057 ; the front. Of te ing part in the â€" the largest prop students, or 90 n In the fall of 1914 t culated at the count; ties, 11 technical coll colleges, 3 veterinary agricultural and mini 710 students, while were attending the 5 schools. Of these m dents there have been army of 36,000 unive 8,000 technical, 6,000 veterinary, 300 agricu mining. CGerman colle; their l‘e‘ular w sions. The list dents, however depleted. actively enga, er by far th; history. And tion of four T CGERM ANx STUDENTsS n and thei last begi they ma. own fate their aid " "C jatest book of Von der Goltz upon warfare gives recipes for ex. tracting the last agonies of effort from exhausted troops; yet this preâ€" ceptor of the Turks is reckoned a humanist among _ hisg colleagues, Dreadful as are the measures to which the Germans have had recourse against their foes, their callous atâ€"| titude toward their own allies is not | less censurable. It JS not surprising | that the Thrks imiky um ‘. ercentage Is Large tutions Contim Kitchener is on the side of the truth when he says that the Turk has been a fairer, cleaner fighter than his German master, Left to themselves, petrolized of the insectivorous Ger-f man lieutenancy, the Turks would ; not have stooped to the abysmal levâ€" els to which the Germans have de-[‘ graded "military science." The averâ€" age Turk (not the upstart Salonica Ottoman, whose whole word swings | between dissipation and sedition) would rather have peace than war.‘ and prefers to let what he considers/ well enough alone. He dreams upon | ' a page of the Koran, inhales his narâ€"| ghile and is as backward in civilizaâ€" « tion as in his chirography, Suddenâ€" | f ly the German comes to him and tells 7 him that to save the holy of holies of' 18 Islam he must commit the most abomâ€" ; inable iniquities. The German berates T and castigates, with an incontinent f« fury, the laggard who does not keep | f1 pace with the tutelage, | m Th censurable. It JS the Turks, their du their slowest Awits begin to rue‘ the made, and actually fate should Germz _| 1 7° Pntain must bear the weight that has fallen from the Russian shoulders as a result of the retreat # the Russian forces. She must arm, manufacture, enlist, "fight as never before or face the chances of . defeat." . Thus frarkly does the I "Great Awakener" speak and on | this theory does he work. I percentage The lists of trian forces." over â€" twelve ficiencies in absorbed the CS attended, shows a this year of 2,013, of not more than 302 are while about 1,710 are service at the front F Lo l css JC â€" CHG Part Kussia has played is sufficientâ€" ly set forth in the statement that "for over â€" twelve months, desnite â€" As, Wws L is 7 part Russia us _ s LCC oeee > GOne enough. He Ppays a tribute to France in the preface of a volume of his speeches just published and says that that heroic nation cannot be exâ€" pected to bear much more of the burâ€" den. And what he thinks of the PAFt Rnssia Lo. _. E7 four fore;t, a colleges have whatever others may think about what Great Britain has already dorle in the present war, the little Welshâ€" man does not think she has done SBOUOR.® HS veasss . s . W of five dies Great Britain latest book bluntly He doesn‘t _mince thi in "the least. Helay:..]...un. I9i% ty British nll-con,hm,. Bm. tio eC utter a sullahla in _ __ doesn Whatever l‘h’d%hfflflymm richly deserves the ti Awakener." If c".."'.'.“.;":“?“!* "00 m meies,, NOTES AND CcOMMENTs winter and she 6,000 business agricultural, an "SC of GLerman students ed in this war is greatâ€" n in any other war in withal, with the excenâ€" , have bee Large, But Most Instiâ€" ontinue Courses, ze of German students ‘"* agonies of effort d troops; yet this preâ€" Turks is reckoned â€" a ong _ his colleagues, ire the measures to nans have had recourse foes, their callous atâ€" | their own allies is not. "_._â€" months, despite deâ€" in equipment, Russia has the energies of half®of the and fourâ€"fifths of the Ausâ€" actually to Germany . the front. t academics, all have maintained and summer sesâ€" matriculated stuâ€" before it he upstart Salonica whole word swings ion and _ sedition) the Turks would to the abysmal levâ€" Germans have deâ€" cience." The averâ€" in markedly 1est eyes open at work, at compact that , and 300 THE W aAR ) fear their conquer by ge: excepâ€" Some machine power of over a minute, we "to sns . 1._â€" IA.*try nale | blue crepe de chine has wide, deep | armholes, edged with fringe. The | fichu shawl collar is also edged with | fringe, which follows down one side _' of the front opening. On the upper | front, over the shoulders, and across ‘ the back there is a decorative design | in rope silk embroidery of the same color. | the cuffs, which are wi | the long sleeves, and t} | of the fur coat are ma | trasting fur. This cc :on a Hudson seal coa , beaver, otter or nutria, f An attractive boudoir enc tuiaith c o8 (< 2°°» e first style feature of a fur coat, for they are to be trimmed with a contrasting fur this winter. The collar,.which is a big, soft, high chokâ€" er, into which one can sink the chin; the cuffs, which are wide bands about the long sleeves, and the bottom edge of the fur coat are made of q eon-" trasting fur. This contrasting fur n a Hudson seal coat is generamn.| dulldancge~s As for furs caracul and ] only the first coat, for they _ There are this year, t] coat that d godet folds t ’ br;;v; _deep yoke empie back, but shorter on the hipg_ A joins the yoke ar with two rows of to accentuate the ness of the skirt. sleeves have overs w o C nR P A dress of striped ; and black, has an ove shorter at the back than The sleeves and vestee de chine. A simple semiâ€"mournin princess lines is of black chine with collar and cuf organdie embroidered in b ks vW s 7 ness to t A charming costume in taffeta has the base of caught up with ovals of and leaves, giving a scal TD. e _ __A petticoat, wh _ enough to be a froc up of peachblow silk led tulle. The effect scale spangles, rosy white tulle is flower ful. Another fancy ; of jetted net over bl: taffeta. â€" The flounce close quilling, ere are two styles of fur coats year, the coat that fits and the that doesn‘t, Both ripple in folds below the waist, for furs, two kinds are in vogue, M "BHAY Hfrtahn es o2 2 uce Ane new evehing ly trimmed with usual laces and e | _ Velvet will predominate | and faille will be strong. | _ Short hooped petticoats ed to some of the abbrevia! frocks that have come fro They produce a flaring silh is very dancy and quaint. Tulle continues the best for dancing gowns and desi found that it is particular ful WRhen draDBETY mrnw «uncg model in and Hudson more can and black, is 200000 2CG S â€" 2AANUUR is beaver trimmed upon a four of Joffre blue broadcloth. Th is novel, as it is very wide und arms, and narrows front and Flat, smoked pearl buttons are Wideâ€"wale corduroy, trimmed black skunk, is employed exten It wears well and looks well an infataba® 12122 "" Dbrown has its skirt part extremely full, the sieeves are set in at the arm scye, and a standing collar of fitch comes up straight and snug about the throut like a handam."~~ > u. UR t A stunning coat in brown has its s For juver}i'l; wear remains good style. U ; ‘Ruffles and Fluffles. Many of the velour coats for chilâ€" dren of 10 or 12 years of age are made with considerable fullness, the skirt portion being cut circular, with a straight thread in front and the back seam cut on a true bias. For juvenile wear, the broad belt Femaime ‘smas l 1 the slirt, | _ "Oh, yes, indeed," her aunt said, | laughing, "but you would sleep on a _ mat woven out of dry grasses, with down pillows for vour head" /w is you were a little yellow baby weeny, teeny baby,â€"you‘d sleep : bag tied on your sister‘s back; in daytime you would go bumptyâ€"b1 as she ran and played; or at n; â€"guns have a thousand 5) A Sleepytime Story. "I don‘t want to go to bed," said little Marjorie with a pout. _ "Why," said Aunt Lucy, "if you were a little brown girl and lived way off in Java, perhaps, or a little black girl and lived in Africa, you wouldn‘t have any nice little white bed with a wulk cerataclcnsâ€"s & 1 boudoir in D8 gowns and designers have at it is particularly beautiâ€" draped over metallic tissues. evehing frocks are elaborata. white striped taffeta fne yomon mortal woman :;-s-k? Fashion Hints GenIL P OAz te: aniote c moand a CA 7. ing, "but you would sleep on a ) hu: voven out of dry grasses, with | dor pillows for your head. Or if dee ere a little yellow baby,â€"a | fro , teeny baby,â€"you‘d sleep in a| * ed on your sister‘s back; in the | too P ihGaaIRnh s1 m 1 s flowerlike and beautiâ€" fancy petticoat is made over black pussy willow flounce is outlined â€" in 5 than at the front, vestee are of crepe and cuffs o'f' mourning dress | _o. old ye your peace â€" It would , which is gorgeous | seem that others besides Elisha had a frock itself, is madel intimations of Elijah‘s coming deparâ€" w silk, veiled in spangâ€" | ture. But these others did not notice effect of iridescent fish | the prophet‘s solemn mien, nor, like rosyâ€"hued _ silk and | Elisha, appreciate the full significance flowerlike and beauti-“of the fact. So Elisha told them ancy petticoat is made | abruntiv +a «t .1 "1!""* Seal, but t};i: + 9 _ _ jas possible. He realized h “fi' fff"m ask: ’ the last few moments in his predominate this winter z’ou;:”m:a;ltl t;;:i:sltlSh:,’, h,:‘:; be strong. |> | younger man remain behind. d pemcoat's are attack> Jehovah hath sent meâ€"T the abbrevfxated dgncmg | of the last journey of Elijah | ve come from Bulloz. divinely preâ€"arranged. A fit a flaring silhouette that I for such a man of God. and quaint. < As Jehovah liveth, and as ies the best material liveth, I will not leave thee ns and designers have Judg. 8. 19; Ruth 3. 13; 1 & is particularly beauti-| 39. Also I Sam. 1. 26; 17. 5; d over metallic tissues. 25. 26; 2 Sam. 14. 19. "Elijal # frocks are elaborateâ€" ter may be withdrawn from | h paillettes, and unâ€" will not be withdrawn from h embroideries. ter." â€"â€"â€"â€"_ 3. Hold ye your peace â€" T: Whl(‘h is> enrammes L _ 12 cut with a ight and snug abbut“t'fle bandage, Another coat in black. _ _ ' poplin, brown overdreps effect med upon a foundation broadcloth. The belt is very wide under the ‘ bands of dull gives extra fullâ€" sting fur generally firingâ€" very short _8 Wrapped it together â€" s us d a large | ;}m of r°g }‘:“t of it, remindingM;:ieoi ends of tulle, 98¢S an is rod at th A hask sthsne"T 9 17 y e Nile (Exod of twoâ€"toned piush "I°5s on| crepe de‘ \ ion| _ From Gilgal â€" Not the Gilgal of )yt;ha fgv::dalt:eol: | Josh. 4. 19; 5, 9, 10, but a place of the wi&e under the S2me name in the hill country of Ephâ€" ont and b | raim, probably alluded to in Deut. ack.ll 1. 30 ::')ir:r::: l::ft‘;!‘ 2. Tarry here â€" Elijah knew how d extensivel ’ hard the parting would be, so he 'wel{, and wh:t' | wanted to spare Elisha as much n.:.. , 3. ___ _,_ "CPamiing | of one end of this large structure neâ€" | cessary before the workers have le( reached the other. Although experiâ€" P ments have demonstrated that pure ® / iron surrounded by oxygen does not h‘ rust, and that some acid, especially ©, carbonic acid, is necessary for the pro-’ " ; duction of rust, the secret of manuâ€" $ , facturing rustless steel and iron reâ€" ‘, mains to be discovered, ; o_ ies _ 9 _ | Madgeâ€"So you feel better since you | | gave up dancing and devoted yourself ‘ , to Red Cross work? Marjorieâ€"In. |â€" _ deed I do, desar. Pyc had my name in‘; | the papers nine times., white very 1 * mai 34â€" ~ _/ oS semedy,* however, _ may be gained from the fact that it requires about £1,000 annually to _ paint one large railway bridge alone. |_ A ypical case of t‘:is kind is the ; Forth Bridge, on which a corps of | painters are constantly employed, | | since the weather makes repainting | ’Of one end af ars0 .0 0 CC sleep at all?"| n‘ RAVAGES or RUST., )| A Corps of Painters Are Constantly | Employed on Forth Bridge. , Few people comprehend the extent _ of purely normal wear and tear. Lonâ€" _ don Titâ€"Bits sa"s that one large railâ€" , way system suffers a lose of more than | eighteen tons of metal daily, due sole! | ly to the effect of rust. Thus far, the only known preventive is to keep the metal surface always covered with a suitable paint. Some idea of the costliness of this remedy,* however, | may be gained from the fact that it requires about £1,000 annually to | paint one l&rge raihkos. 1013 °°CY 10 ToF HUJ. 1g., 9. When they we; ::’ crossing the Jord: Ty] again on the slopes Y | ead." Ss! Before I am take; .A at last mentions the I" | _A double portionâ€" M | the firstâ€"born (see D / .:10.. A hard thing God was not in the to bestow. It must M | himeal# gugre 3 ts !! / for chil-’ Les age are| ness, the lar, with ind â€" the . 1 oad belt I ed ninch v Israel than evl-lml;e; g _\ " . _ _ [HHTOL of fire and horges of fireâ€"Compare 2 Kings 6. 17. 12. My father, my fatherâ€"aA title given by the younger prophets to the older prophets. The chariots of Israel and the J horsemen thereofâ€"Eligha recognized | that Elijah was a greata,. 4. 2 C"ZCC| I + the *atatn} .___, "*"* {~In~some respects No. 2 Canadiar at last mentlons. the fateful event. lHospital, which occupies the golf Hoâ€" A double portionâ€"The birthright of tel Le Touquet and overflows into th;ofir“s\t-gor: (;tiae Deut. 21, 17). . tents on the links, has greater charm, Cof ard t “hg ~â€" The SP""F‘Of but the site of No. 1 is in the highest Ob was "Otl In the power of Elijah | degree attractive, owing to its outlook to bestow, It must come from God | over a wild natural stretch of scenery, himself. Elijah was careful to let | _ ‘The hospital, which was organized Elisha know that only as he (Elisha) | ag long ago as September, has graduâ€" put himself in close touch with God ally perfected itself since its arrival gould he come into possession of God‘s | 33 Plymouth on October 16. It had pirit. ’man sites in England where alone 11. A chariot of fire and horses of ‘ 4000y cases were tfeate('l. hB an s rrcdr { fireâ€"Comp_arg 2 Kings 6. 17. ut andat / I k p 10 2o c s CTe . OF . SOEvCEest int said, feathers, hung up in the queer little ep on a) hut. The little Lapland baby cuddles es, with down into his hammock made of warm d. Or if | deerskin, and his mother hangs it baby,â€"a | from the roof of the sod hut,.‘"* leep in a| "I think I‘ll cuddle down in my bed,‘ k; in the | too," said Marjorie, yawning. "For I tyâ€"bump | think I like my own clean little white I at night | bed the best."â€"Youth‘s Companion. | _ 7. Fifty Menâ€"The life of | was not secure under the such Kings as Ahab and his Men who were giving them to the sacred calling seemin themselves together in grouyp the time being lived in re Such bands are mentioned places also. Elisl;a, ;\fi;;;ee-ci;‘t’; the of the fact. So Eli abruptly to hold their L |THE SUNDAY LESSON L es 2 09 PSle ancing and devoted yourself ross work? M&rjofioâ€"â€"ln- éear. I‘ve had my name in ; mink #la.5 II. At the fire _ ‘AJanâ€"Fhe narrative of toâ€"day‘s lesson was, of course, supplied by Elisha, as only he was present when Elijah was caught up in the chariot of fire Verse 1. When . up Elijahâ€"The n: lesson was, of c Elisha, as only he some acid, especially is necessary for the proâ€" t, the secret of manuâ€" less steel and iron re. _ _ hreat majority of the Red Cros; Lesson ILâ€"Elijah Taken Up Into Heaâ€" ibz?dnc:;::ei"flg 'mn:?:: Z:e:h:rfv::: ven, 2 Kings 2. 1â€"12%a. Golden _ | a cursory inspection gf the annual o tna w hons ou _ h e e oi dan‘s 1. Elisha 1(:;2:;‘1; t;é‘)e.ave Elijah :iv:;d;fni not confined to any one secâ€" "But you never could gue little Eskimo babies sleep." Marjorie shook her head. "Why, right in a bag c k ...A ‘ INTERNATIONAL LESSON, OCTOBER 10. C were gone overâ€"‘"In Jordan, Elijah â€" stood slopes of his native Gilâ€" 1j en ul n q l1 these 1 {â€"Elisha recogmzed,’ In & a greater defense to | Cana;har;), t}l:e : ‘r military resources, | 0d¢I8, bot N\ wzocr y _ | ment. . The inc Jordan (Verses 7â€"12a) taken _away â€" hasi L o 9 Broeett s NoR Ahab and his children, _giving themselves up ons c 210 on caete deaiind When Jehovah would take py, C AcApY o Elisha, however insist on making remain behind. ng seemingly bound er in groups and for ived in retirement. mentioned at otHher «11sha as much pain realized how much nts in his presence of Elijah had been ed. A fitting exit peace. on making the e thee â€" See 3; 1 Sam. 14. 17. 55; 20. 3; "Elijah‘s masâ€" could guess how the a prophet as thy soul reign of Elijah / It would him: he his Masâ€" | natural and artificial, is ey | than in most London and | hospitals; and one can poin | that is inferior even in su _ ment as Xâ€"ray apparatus. I light to see the smooth worki Canadian officers and doctors R.A.M.C. or Red Cross, in mense organization. of whole of softest , and T has airaegl ies o ce le ooee Mc t ! as long ago as September, has g ally perfected itself since its a at Plymouth on October 16. I: many sites in England, where 4,000 cases were treated, before ing for France in May, but onl day has it reached its full nerfa t This p "ticular hospital is respects the leading one, ow new method invented by Col. lMacLarén of |â€" New Ryennew 8 aq;i., 5_ __" ~Ng tribute to the Canaâ€" | dian Hospital Organization in Europe. No. 1‘ General Canadian Hospital situated on the outskirts of Boulogne, lies in the centre of much the biggest N hospital concentration ever attempted | in history. The visitor finds himself | : attern‘ No. 908 amazed at the scale and scope of this | to be slipped on hospital town to the efficiency of l' tened on the she which Canadians have made a notaâ€" ’ at a low waistlin ble contribution. Their share in an and is embroid« organization which is beyond preceâ€" / and costs 10 cer dent cannot perhaps be exaggerated. / having either lo It is second only to their performance | 18 ,att‘l’d‘e‘it? & in the field. l alring ic ux _ cheéul iteâ€"$uj; . _ __s_", . "Ut | 7 °"" . ":C COmmerce of life. She thought' has it reached its full perfection. | in them, wrongly enough sometimes, tnmruinest | as I thought in my turn, but that was The Equipment. f merely matter of oninion. The thesis all these hospitals, English and | Was there, coherent and four square, lian, the operating theatres are | With the power to hold her own in s, both of structure and equipâ€" | it. She was obsessed w"ith the idea The incident of light, both| Of a supenor' caste of mind, to which il and artificial, is even better| She and her intellectual set belonged. in most London and Montreal | With all this she was a most accomâ€" als; and one can point to little. Plished musician, and hal filled the s inferior even in such equip-a Queen’g Hall more than once for con-I is Xâ€"ray apparatus. It is a deâ€"| certs given in her own nama DPTUP .i 3 L2 J .. ;) 7. ~___ O lected over $20,000 since its inaug'uration, $11,390 of which has been sent to the head offices of the Society in Toronto. In addition to this cash donation, over $7,500 has ‘been expended for materials made up by local workers, Taking other contriâ€" butions into consideration, it is estiâ€" mated by officials of the Victoria branch that upwards of $40,000 has / been subscribed locally. The Canadian Hospitals at the Front. A writer in an English publication pays a striking tribute to the Cana_ s An idea of the exp . | work in Montreal can | from the report of the partment. Last Januar ments were 15 cases, eg 450 dressings. Last m sent to the Red Cross I seas. The Victoria branch i1 umbia has collected over its inaug'uration, $11,390 been sent to the head c Society in Toronto. In ad cash donation, over $7,5 expended for materials local workers. Taking . butions into consideratio mated by officials of t branch that upwards of been subscrihed Iaaa1.. in dorls sns "" euy One tion of the country, but extends all the provinces. The last monthly report of the 1 fax branch records recent cont; tions of $5,500 and addition to membership of 71 active members 14 life members. During the m shipments were made of nearly bales. ugp;, . _ , BDectI0n. of the annual reports, which are available, show a record of Red Cross achievement which is not confined to any one seeâ€" tion of the country, but extends over all this munertil 22 ‘ne resbects No, 2 Canadianf e 1, which occupies the golf Hoâ€"| . Writing Touquet and overflows into | Sians for the links, has greater charm. | ard White A Year‘s ag: _ . C 7CJ 4nd 1 am ’the only Canadian in this hospital." Such being the case with a good many Canadian soldiers, our French Canaâ€" dian Red Cross workers are indeed to be congratulated for their charitable enterprise in writine +. 11. _ PC wrii , 07 _ "*l‘ that I need is that you write to me again." Another says, in reply to a lady who wrote to him: "Pardon me if I have not answered immediately, I have been very ill and cannot sit up in bed. T «annot write with my right hand, and it is with great difficulty I write this with my left. I am very happy to have news from a French Canadian lady. If only I were with you we could talk together. I do not spesk a word of English, and I am the only Canaji _ . CCHH: @ PP ARlstrrraictas. id‘ ‘Cerprise in writing to the wounded, Year‘s Red Cross Work in Canada. The great majority of the Red Cross anchas in AAuloa ". . ars_ __ _ "2°" L received your letter this morning, and i. gzave me infinite pleasure, especially since youmteinan;h.forlunrud English only with the greatest diffiâ€" culty. You ask me whether I need anything. AJJ that I need is that you]‘ write to me again." touch with ,pu,_ Put themselves in touch with their French Canadian compatriots, and some of the letters they have received are not far from pathotin , _ _ It must not be f orgotten that 2renf Sazmy of our Canadian soldiers word of and do not speak a h English, I«flfithw mdflfihnmh.m“ 1 with versa “;.:'_t_‘f‘i“"'fl.lfhantom. 10 cases, each contaiH};;g s. Last month 137 were Red Cross hospitals over Rmcnoesrum.wrr;. s er (Aiffan stt rt t NNE s d, where alone l’ something to write abou ed, before sailâ€" / solid studies, in â€"histor y, but only toâ€" |' and the commerce of life full perfection.| in them, wrongly enoug | as I thought in my turn, ient. merely matter of oninion 8, English and | Was there, coherent and Biltas sfi c ‘s. During the month e made of nearly 120 the expansion of the al can be gathe;;(i of the surgical deâ€" January | the shipâ€" The ol ce o ee ie EOe es t is a deâ€"| Certs given in her own name. ing of the! "I have a certain hesitation in sayâ€" , whether | iDg all this, because it may seem this imâ€"| founded on mere recollections of my reading of prodigies of the past, our Canadian | own Admirable Crichton or the Conâ€" , and in | tinental Pico della Mirandola, As a a potenâ€"| lad, Crichton is said to have known a two sta.| dozen languages. I wonder in how’ with its| many of them he could have deceived s an adâ€"| the native. Gilbert Hamerton used to ! z distri-f say that no more than two can ever to priâ€"| be acauired in that perfection. 7 within | _ "The peculiarity in this lady‘s case, It is an | 4s a Russian, was that she was one | rger esâ€"| of many, only less richly endowed. | zeneral,| And I hasten to add, still with the | nada is | purpose of saving myself, that the|‘ of the | union of qualities precluded the markâ€" | up of| ed bias for one that makes for sucâ€"|" noidins | cage " ou proa oA P acs Cogi s ooo 000 CC ue Corrent num. the highest | ber of the Bookman of a woman he its outlook | met in that country : of scenery, ’ "I knew of one," he says, "who had organizedifour languages, besides her own, at has graduâ€"| her tongue‘s endâ€"English, French, its arrival| German, Italian, She spoke in them 6. It hnd’and wrote in them. And she had here alone l’ something to write aboutâ€"a basis of efore sailâ€" solid studies, in history, literature, tlonly tnâ€" |AMH +ha wihnins us cereng on P D | al is in some | , owing to a | Col. Murray unswick, the has arranged n# | mareidas | NOe APranliinntint ialialisets ie t h ) performance | is attached to a threeâ€"piece gathered l skirt, lengthened by a ruffle. Pattern 1 is in some’cuts in sizes 32 to 42 inches, bust owing to a Measure? requiring in size 36 1% Col. Murray l yards 36â€"inch material. 1 yard 36â€"inch nswick, the | lining for upper part of skirt. as arranged, _Patterns, 15 cents each, can be obâ€"| ig corridorl t'amed at your local Ladies‘ Home Lssn qs o nssessc EJ in British Colâ€" Oit Iio.| | ""IVIN§ of the aptitude of the Rusâ€" s into | Sians fgr acquiring languages, Ri:l:- ;h;m, I zrd V‘;hlthemg tells in the current numâ€" ‘ | ber o mighest | ber of the Bookman of a woman he members and ing one of them shortly after, he ’said: "Mike, I have to inform â€"you that after the end of this year I am going to raise your rent." _"Troth, then, your honor," â€"said Mike, "I‘m more t.hqan pleased to hear it, for I‘m at my wits end to knowhowl’m(o- ing to raise it myself," _ of the Haliâ€" t contribuâ€" TORONTO the Writing of the Pattern No. 9087. This frock is made to be slipped on over the head or fasâ€" tened on the shoulder, and is confined at a low waistline by shirring or belts, and is embroidered with No. 14732, TeA n ol c Was & APTITUDE FOR LANGUAGES herewith â€" i;; _ With the advent of the full skirt and looae-fitting garments have deâ€" veloped many goodâ€"looking and novel style features, not the least interestâ€" ing and charming of which â€" is the. jumper dress, suitable for nfternoonl wear.© A deli¢hiHfu! mair :2004 0V yoman Knew Only Five, But || ca;fll;--}o;‘ Knew Them Well. | the whole. ts 10 cents. The underw#i;ig: either lond or short sleeves, hed to a threeâ€"piece gathered Ilhbho.ufrui fruit. ‘l'boeov‘: comes off .the first opportunity, the sick ‘soldier, for all the good housewife‘s efforts, will have nothing up, or at least supposed to be done ‘fllmlllhun‘mdcfiu.-um tins, coconm tins, and so forth. Needâ€" less to say, such preserves are as perâ€" No. 9087. delightful model in Ladies‘ Home om the Home Patâ€" A George Street, have is ilas ‘ MC B lng‘ 4 be obâ€" ' pire Home | at q1 e Pat- [ of n treet, | to hb our 7 the ; ES. |and : cry t , But | camp the w well | RUS'/ were Richâ€" | treatr iumâ€" | some n he | in bet The had | about + At | arriva nch, | kept s hem | heard had | Canadi of | Shortly ire, up a ¢ ght / Our me 1es, / Germar t is shown Journal Foxes and wisely KEept their 2 P 9 e , Cry the other day from the prisoners‘ t camp for their tennis flannels, On the whole, our men have been treated well by the Saxons. At first they ~ | were not. They complained of harsh ~ / treatment on the trains to Germany, ~ some of the officers being sandwiched ‘ ) in between captured Turcos." ‘ The officer related a fresh story ‘ l | about Canadians at the front: “Tbeir"' | arrival in the trenches, of course, was | kept secret, but in the morning we! heard the Germans cal] out, ‘Hullo, / Canadians! Where are your horses ?‘ | Shortly afterwards the Germans stuck up a dummy horse on the parapet. | Our men riddled it with bullets. ‘The | ’Germans then took it down, and it j reappeared swathed in bandages, t "Our men kept up the joke. ‘Hullo! 7 you Germans! Where are your sauâ€" | , sages?‘ they shouted, and they filled i some old socks with sand and strung | c them together on a rope between two | 1 sticks. ‘Here they are, Now come i and fetch them," n., ,, "" Cme, the whole, our well by the were not. The treatment on t some of the off in between cap "s the swamps lndi pâ€"‘;t;ilu of wire feueu' have led _ QIlickly to the dest on of flll mait. . L i â€" 4; ,,_C"F Of the ambition of the . ’ Canadians at Folkestone, next to killâ€" | ing Germans, is to march through the Istreets of "dear old London," as the | officer called it, and let the people see | them. "You stayâ€"atâ€"home Londoners," ‘| he said, "cannot understand the yearnâ€" . ing of our Canadians to be in the Emâ€" ,’ ' pire‘s capital. We hear from the boys | [at the front every day and every bit of news makes them more impatient | to be out there. The wives of two of . our men who were taken prisoners by | the Saxons are staying in this hotel, | and the husbands sent up a desolate | cry the other day g,,,, ;3 _ "CSOlate i "It was a simple affair. He was a Canadian. I had spent a night in the trenches. The morning shells were beginning to find it, and one shell severed our telephone lines. Without waiting for the, order this young sig-l naller leaped over the parapet, un-, coiling a new wire as he ran through a perfect rain of bullets and shrlp-‘ nel. He got the wire fixed, and on his | way back he actually stopped to re-} pair another. He stood there quite | calmly, just as if he didn‘t know the | awful risk he was running, I expect-| ed to see him drop every second, but | he ran back to the trenches untouched, and all he said when he flung aside | ! the empty coil was: ‘Whew! I think| that‘s all right now.‘" € The height of the smbifine at aslf AUSTRALIAN FAUNA w ~ â€" t _ | tals that, nhon was uy | and that er cannon was use at Edinâ€" |rannot be ts found to answer. | qanet."* "But if you were to ask me what was the coolest deed I have ever seen," he said, "I could pick out a certain signaller, whose name I do ‘not know and whose gallant action I believe has been overlooked. | deeds that have wonvil;e---\.'tc:' a'm;w:h: Distinguished Conduct Medal. Canadian Signaller Strung ‘Phone Wire as Bullets Hailed. A staff officer attached to one of the Canadian divisions at Folkestone has just returned from the trenches in Flanders. Twelve months ago he was a civil engineer in Western Canâ€" ada, but he was one of the first to answer the call of the mother country,‘ and has several times been at close grips at the front. He has witnessed deedsâ€"that have wan Fha T M an d aL . Oioe wWoC BRAYVES DEADLY GERMAN FIRE. and "And they said unto him, Where is Sarah, thy wife? and he said, Beâ€" It Is An Infuence Not Only for the Body But Also {o, Of time over_ | 4. ""‘_WÂ¥994 contains more or less waâ€" : course of time overâ€"| ter; even the driest wood known conâ€" °_ "Australia,â€"it l:nf tains two or three pounds of water to it already,â€"and in | every hundred pounds of weight. Ab. trou::‘t'nme + + .]Bolutely ary .. "OTI8 f ly. e "all.‘s orse on the parapet. 1 it with bullets. The took it down, and it thed in bandages, The Conception of Home "‘ere are your sayâ€" ted, and they filled th sand and strung a rope between two y are. Now come But the Germans heads down," _ , 4 tresh story t the front: "Their hes, of course, was i the morning we 8 call out, ‘Hullo, _are your horses ?‘ the Germans stuck the fa,,;32 " MMEétory of the disease in ;e 5"“' Sil, | the family previously, will do well to h o se3 / adopt this practice as a habit from b:tl:ve:tr:ng! early‘ YOI!:’.' It should be (and now Fow 'Lox: I believe sften is) taught to children he Germans | in the 9{'ools. These latter wil} thus down," | ward off not only tubercular mischief, fehr ; but a1so, it may be, the operation for UNA | adghoids, which have in late years beâ€" * | come so fashionable, and are mostly Have Done / :i::mry. even harmful..â€"A Physi. w I pped to reâ€" } contin there quite?! ©44@! ‘t know the | Strain «_ I expectâ€"| tripod second, but; to be 1 untouched,] h'"".e 4 or «nB | destroying the it the .1,; ___, ~ Made, would Ehow that the ultimate wood cell is composed of crystals like grains of Bugar or salt, and that thin films of water hold the Crystals apart, yet bfndthemintoam A good miâ€" croscope shows the wood cell and re. veals its spiral bandages and its openâ€" ings and cavities, but no instrument yet mwa:emnh the ultimate erve. tals n uon o9R Wood Cell Is C”N of Crystals Uhcni-.(s.n,-,s.u. I 4 j3 _ j _ °C WOCre is no better , method that the daily practice of | deep breathing, Onece or twice a day, | preferably when you are out of doors, ' you take half a dozen very deep breaths with your mouth shut, holdâ€" ing the breath a little each time, and endeavoring to ufiw the utterâ€" most your chest Oker lt ite crtatectallimcdls css 7 112 " To prevent this, with chron ; chitis and other lung affection | important in the first place t sure that you have pure breathe; secondly, to keep th in proper condition for breat} On the former I need not exy ,for the latter aim there is no , method that the daily pract deep breathing, Once or twine t-j tripodâ€"not to suffer one of the three 1t | to be unduly weakened by any cause. 4, j The act of respifation infuses oxyâ€" e | Een into the blood, and at the same ; | time expels carbonic acidâ€"carbonic dioxide. If the air we habitually e | breathe contains an undue percentage . | of the latter and not enough of the e | former the lungs soon become discasâ€" > | ed. Hence, the value of fresh and a , pure air; hence the danger of crowdâ€" ‘ ed tenements in the slum, of illâ€"venâ€" . | tilated workâ€"rooms, and such like. 4 These latter are the fruitful source | of that plague of civilized countries, : pulmonary consumption, which, howâ€" | ever, is now fast dying out amongs: | us, at such a rate that its extinction | within thirty years is prophesiedâ€" an improvement due solely to sanitaâ€" lltio'll‘l and betterment of dwellings. in Mikstareeck uts i n ~ Woop anD warpr. | The essential point towards preâ€" é , servation of that mens sana corpore | sano, to which we should all sedyâ€" ’ lously aspire from the earliest days | of intelligently appreciating the fact | that we are alive, lies, therefore, in Jeontinued effort to maintain thai equal balanceâ€"not to throw â€" undue strain upon either of the legs of the tripodâ€"not to suffer one of the three O e OL m M dhabite Sm .38. l'l The phenomena of life in man and °‘du higher animals may be said o > rest on a tripodâ€"the classical stool °/ with three legs. That tripod consists !| of the heart, the lungs and the neryâ€" ‘| ous system. The physiological action of each depends on that of the others, ‘| Their functions are closely interwoven l and cannot be separately considered | in full detail without reference to that | conjunction. The proper balance of these functions constitutes health: a» unequal and not accurate poised adâ€" { justment spelis diseaseâ€"disâ€"easeâ€" | absence of ease, and so of normal] | health. e "" es as many believe, do exist, would @xplain why | water expelled from wood without & ; PE TOr # id at , _ _@2. / "18HC8 of wood at a sufficiently powerful / it be made, would Of crystals like grains of Alt, and that thin films | of k the Crystals apart, yet Into n unc s 0y PET . wood itself. overcome in the home or they \,;) g:..-l rise up and conquer man in The home is the citadel of human., ity from which to attack all the inim{. cal fo:ou_oloodety The home ;« the evils of inb K â€" 590- thov "VI o Vfi“‘ -"I'“"-"â€""t“- & ffl\’urit& ;lv“‘ ." a° friend some me, T Dll.::. create an M‘ that ‘:r restful and ;»., low Puiticms .. ~ & nt this, with chroni:'l,;r(»n- other Iung affections, it is ?_uolelo-,- ’(ehn‘or two, a The Bulwark of the State ast dying out amongs: rate that its extinction years is prophesiedâ€" nt due solely to sanitaâ€" P CCAE CTVTIEs TL 10 e first place to make _ have pure air to ly, to keep the lungs tion for breathing it. xl need not expatiate:; HEALTH w ?l!fify and A despatch from 14 Daily Mail learns fror Gdent in Copenhagen t rt states no news h wellâ€"informed | na No News Has any wise I that there v nected with ple not that rui begin d semble, lamatior It is â€" A prociamai of Moscow « that city to regrettable : €days, when and a numb result of u with the pol: The prefec FIVE PERsSONs DURINC @aPPD firm som« their Aist by « ing th MJ Sor th fr &T stiff in t} th f7 Big Wwi en th it arc ; the 7 alonv Or it ti th rC ma pli« Ir WA despatch fr ‘ar Office casualties in Iul: soners are in e corps, 120,000 on fighting on the . amount of booty ‘ 79 cannon have rear of the Fren of uncounted mat machine guns, a French Close 8 SUDDEN T0 B W mer At 0 Sur it tific in of whi TY t} liver, the s whic} gre« 0ctober 1; changed the They have within the culable certai that mastery i definiu-lv tm 14 The Londo correspondent They "av Withi U int t} strict (Oth Thes 140 i n the domi hat whe the ham 1 it will n it wall ried line the ener of anxie genuity A all his an hono it n W us t _ A S i will c {erman h After Sud U and th the t 1P( rg

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