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Durham Review (1897), 18 May 1916, p. 3

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ET COAST «.;’;:gy/' coworR FERN PEOPLE ENC wo Powere Terioms 60 \ Told im S Enver Pasha Aspires to Regenerate His Country. Any one who reads Turkish history for the last eight yearsâ€"the Young Turk movement the deposition of Abdul Hamid, the Turkish revolution and â€" the â€" Balkan â€" warsâ€"constantly moots the name of Eaver Pasha, scays World‘s Work. This statement has one ruling i‘deaâ€"that he is a man of destiny, a man almost divinely apâ€" pointed to regenerate his country. In his working@ room he sits with a large picture of Napoleon on one side amdé on« of Frederick the Great on the Why, I‘d jist set an‘ fret, an‘ fret, Lest somethin‘ might go wrong; So if you go Pll have ye know That I‘m aâ€"goin‘ along." Then Uncle. Zeke, who come last week Along o‘ my Aunt Flo To board with Paw an‘ me an‘ Maw, Allowed that they would go. "I‘m sure," sez he, "that Flo an‘ me Would feel sick loneliness, Lcft here alone when you were gone, We‘d best go, too, I guess." esn tpediiih i t...2.2.20.,.. 00. c t 12 17â€" 31, 1898, dedicated the Church of Roge‘ner in Jerusalem and made Lk uk8 BP yug2 _3 _ _ 0 CCX CRCICm and made one of his characteristic speeches directed at the ancient French protectorate over the Catholic communions in Syria and elsewhere throughout the Turkish Empire he laid down the policy of an ambitious statecraft which looked ulâ€" timately to the alliance between the despotism of the Turk and the autoâ€" cracy of the Hohenzollerns. And ail this was part of the promotion c Germany‘s designs as a world power, » superstate, to whose wishes in trade, commerce and physical expansion 2l Europe must bow. That â€" within twenty years the unceasing effort to make true the dreams of which the pilgrimage to Jerusalem was the picâ€" turesque prelude has brought on the greatest war in history is the natura! outcome of unbounded and sinister ambitions. Consequently, the report that Germany has now made a definite compact with Turkey in which she promises her ally her protection and binds her not to make a separate peace is but the logical result of the existing facts, which in themselves are the climax of twenty years of intriâ€" gue and diniomaey that wwals. iL. CAIsung lacts, which in themselv the climax of twenty years of gue and diplomacy that unde aegis of William have brough crovs and crescent into an ope unabashed relationship of mutu miration, â€" with "frightfulness® method and manner, whether the be laid in Armanin m im s NoTES a~pcouusry TS O Are you expectin me ) set home while you ta Whore all them wild tt ITwon‘t in Ma When Kaisee Will M EMULATES NAPOLEON. ain‘t my Paw an‘ dear old k‘nd as they kin be ar so much, providin‘ such plendid treat fur me? 11 AT _ner ally her protection and ‘r not to make a separate but the logical result of the facts, which in themselves are ose I‘ll terfere FOR 1 ty mediate _ me this \rmenia hough i pre‘er thi ht dary in the proj nd his associata "Sequenuy, the report as now made a definite _'l_‘urkey in which she A h 18 ev an‘ dear old Maw ship of mutual adâ€" frightfulness" the , whether the seene r or in the North the Great on the e h‘s heroes, and for <France â€"and iam on Octobe h m CHIH #o#: t VC that chile ‘ves are 1 intriâ€" ler the rht the en and t} the €20000008 CHC "\ the hat, is p ° pecially with ‘ hat may be : ‘ veil remain, k | anc neatly in | Parasols n used for trimming dresses and blouses,‘ purpose of â€" receiving cor and often forms the greater portion said, "The American peop of the garmsnt. The sheer lace:mnsidvr the blinded of flouncings are particularly pretty for France and Great Britai summer dance and evening dresse,'own blind, because _ th« Metal laces are effective on the more‘ blinded soldiers and sailors formal gowns for daytime and evenâ€" en their eyesight for hum ing, â€" A particularly pretty uce of for the future of America." Neckwear this season is as fascinatâ€" ing and offers as many possibilities for individuality â€" as ever. Some smart li‘tle novelity ruches from Paris, now being shown in the shops, to complete a costume effectively, are narrow and finished with buckle, or tie with narrow ribbons. Popularity of Lace and Embroidery The extreme favor being shown the typical lingerie frock has brought lace and embro‘dery into wide use again this summer. Lace is being Shoe manufacturers are loud in their praise of the shortâ€"skirt vogue. In former years skirts have varied in width and trimming, but until this seaâ€" son have always rema‘ned at a conâ€" servative length. _ With the mod‘sh short skirt of the moment, smart, trim shoes are absolutely necessary to the general effect of the costume. The high laced boot of tan, brown, black or gray is popular with the tailored su‘t; for afternoons, with the light silk or the novelty cotton frock, the oldâ€"time Colonial pump, with its huge buckle of silver or gunâ€"metal, is once more a lowâ€"shoe favorite. Veils, Parasols and Collars. At the beginning of the season there were any number of novel effects in veilings, but with the advance of the season the call for veilings for street and general use, aside from motoring, Voile and Embroidery Flouncing Hats, veils. shoes, parasols, dainty little collar and cuff sets, and all the numerous other accessories which go to complete the costume are charmingâ€" ly designed this season to fit in smartly with the new silhouette and the gcneral lines of the costume. Some Summer Accessories. T1XE FASHICNS Spanish Dance Dress l 7138 1 _ George A. Kessler, a Lusitania surâ€" ;\'i\or. has decided to give up his busiâ€" | ness to direct the handling of the fund |for the blinded soldicrs of France, Belgizm and Great Britain. ie is an ]ofl'icer and founder of the Permanent Blind Relief War Fund. Mrs. Kessler will also aid the cause, not only by giving money but by personal efforts. Already a large number of influential and wealthy people of the United States have become interested in this movement, and Mr. Kessler is hopeâ€" ful that millions will be contributed. Jules Bois, the noted French author who addressed a gathering for the purpose of receiving contributions, said, "The American people should consider tKke blinded of Belgium, France and Great Britain as their own â€" blind, because these allied blinded soldiers and sailors have givâ€" en their eyesight for humanity and Napoleon, who rose to be a genâ€" eral of brigade after only eight years‘ conection with the French army, was shortly after shorn of that honor when Robespierre fell; yet so adroit a polit‘cian was he that by 1795 he was the head of the forces of the conâ€" vention, though nominally an aideâ€"deâ€" camp to Barras as commanderâ€"inâ€" chief, and actually the most effectiveâ€" ly powerful man in France. Gets Her Permission First. "Has he a mind of his own?" "Yes, but he always asks his wife what he shall do with it." The biggest drop in crime was noticâ€" ed in the year ending March, 1915, when the percentage was 281 per 100,000 population. _ The fiscal year now drawing to a close is expected to show a still further decrease in crime, the report says. dving Thoir Lives to Blinded Soldiers Estimates for Year for British Priâ€" sons Drop $500,000. A reduction in the prison estimates of the British Isles for the coming year of $500,000 or about 12 per cent., and the shutting up, in whole or in part, of a score of prisons are some of the visible evidences of the reducâ€" tion of crime owing to the war, acâ€" cording to the report of the comâ€"â€" missioners of prisons. _ Of the 20 priâ€" sons closed or in process of be‘ng closed eleven have been closed entirely, all being situated in towns of modâ€" erate size like Chelmsford, Hereford, Stafford, St. Albans, etec. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer or from The McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Ont., Dept. W. For the sports blouse, handkerchief and butcher‘s linen are both popular; pongee, the rough Chinese crepes, and the coarser voiles are also practical and well liked. _ Costumeâ€"blouses and shirtâ€"waists are mostly fin‘shed with the open throat or adjustable collar, although with the strictly tailored suit one sees now and then a fetching choker. ‘ The tubâ€"frock is more popular than for many a year; Paris hergelf enâ€" dorses the cotton dress this summer. Many atractive novelt‘es are being sent us from the. French looms; among them are the artictic piques. voiles, and other fabrics of Rodier, with their quaint patterns and effecâ€" tive colorings. _ A particularly pretty voile for blouses and frocks is a fine check in color, with a solid celâ€" vage; this colored selvage is used as a finish for collar, cuffs, jabots and the like. The Colored Lingerie Blouse. The colored blouse of organdy, voile, Georgette. and wash satin, has taken such a hold on the popular fancy that it is qu‘te difficult to find a really atâ€" tractive plain white blouse, ccxept-; ing tho:e for sports wear. _ Pale pink, all tones of tan and yellow, softl‘ blues and grays predominate. _ The cowumeâ€"blouse of pale cream loce or Georgette, usually has an interlining: of the palest flesh chiffon; the blue} waist is p‘ped with pink, or another| harmonious contrast. _ It is indeed a season of color arnd one may indulge to the heart‘s content. | lace flounc‘ng is illv@trated in the Spanish dance frock shown here; upâ€" per portion of skirt and bolero are of taffeta, bodice and flounce of a threadâ€" lace flouncing. An effective bit of contrast is introduced in the dark girâ€" dle and the narrow ribbons banding the short puff sleeves. _ Another. a simpler, even more youthful dress, is illustrated of voile and embroidery flouncing; it is charmingly suited te the young girl for summer wear. REDUCTION IN CRIME. Napoleon‘s Rise. Czar‘s Winter Palace. The Czar of Rus#ia‘s winter palace at Petrograd is probably the most wonâ€" derful royal residence in the world. Many of its rooms, of which there are over 700, are of enormous sizs. The valuable collection of china known is mlso kept in the palace Eleven thousand four hundred Briâ€" tish men teachers are serving w‘th the forces and about 9,000 have atâ€" tested under the Dorby scheme. _ In addition there are 147 serving with the naval forces and 236 women actâ€" ing as nurses. _ Teachers have a‘ ready gained five Victoria Crosses, while 232 have been killed, 118 woundâ€" ed and nine m‘ssing. Boracic should always be <kept in the house in case of _ bad cuts or wounds. _ Put the powder in a wine bottle and fill up with hot water. Pour some into a small howl, and add sufâ€" ficient water to make it the right heat. Wash the cuts or wounds in this. When, through iliness, a constant cupply of hot flannels is required a good idea is to put a steamer over a saucepan of boiling water on‘ the hot stove and lay the flannels in the steamâ€" er. _ In this way they can be changed easily and frequentiy, and are much hotter thar if wrung out of hot water. It is important in nursing a case of diphtheria to keep the patient lying down until the doctor has said that it is quite safe for him to sit up. There is always the danger of heart paralyâ€" sis if the patient is allowed to sit up too soon. The boy or girl who has a poor complexion should cultivate a taste for figs, prunes, greens, oranges, lemons, and other fruits. It is when the child gets older that the mischief I refer to is commonly done. _ There is the routine daily bath, resorted to merely as a customary practice, without any thought of the consequences. _ It is a fruitful source of weakness, no matter what care is taken as to the temperature. Mothers see their children weakly and obvious ly.not thriving, and wonder at the cause. _ You inquire, and find them in a warm or tepid bath daily, often two. â€"Reduce to once or perhaps twice a weekâ€"all that is really essential for purposes of wholesome cleanlinessâ€" and the immediate improvement is commonly most marked.â€"A Physician. Celery tops and roots steeped in hot water makes an excellent tea to be taken by nervous persons. Health Notes. Bathing in salt water tones up the skin and gives it a fresh, wholesome color. | _ In a case where the usual home reâ€" ‘ medies for impaired digestion are no :longer efficacious and the continual |lattacks begin to affect the general | health. it is necescary to go to a ‘ good doctor and ask him to find the | underlying cause of the trouble. There ‘are many reasons for the failure of | the digestive powers that lie quite be: | yond the scope of amateur diagnosis, | with its dangerous accompanimentâ€" |\ amateur dosing; although there are Tare, of course, many other reasons | that any intelligent person, can search | out for himself. | Too many people become chronic ‘ dyspeptics because they will not learn | to masticate properly, to refrain from ‘hearty meals when they are tired, or ito deny themselves articles of food that experience has shown to be i""i | digestible. _ That form of dyspepsia is not in itself hard to cure, but those who suffer from it are often very difâ€" ficult to handle. _ They are likely to have their pet remedy,â€"a soda tablet, or what not,â€"which often does good: service for years, but it bound to fnil‘l in the end. â€" Then nothing can be done for them unless they learn selfâ€"conâ€" trol. | Warmth is really far more importâ€" ant to the young child than cleanliâ€" ness, and must always be considered first. _ You naturally bathe the baby before a fire on most days of the year, and as a rule we may assume that sufficient precautions on this point are taken for the newâ€"bovn and younger infants, whose resistance to cold is nil. Cleanliness is said to be next to godliness. _ But allâ€"the same it may be overdone, and probably nothing does more extensive harm to young children than ruleâ€"ofâ€"thumbâ€"notions of cleanliness, or the â€" hardâ€"andâ€"fast stereotyped methods of the nonpintelâ€" ligent mother or nurse. _ There is the old story of a nurse who was asked how she knew the right temperature for the baby‘s bath, and replied that when the infant grew blue then she knew the water was too cold. I imâ€" agine she must have kept down the population in her locality particularly well. | Chronic Dyspeptics. ' Simple dyspepsia is that form of | indigestion that is not caused by any | lesion or malformation of the stomach ‘or other digestive organs. People | differ widely in the strength of their | digestive apparatus, but most adults ‘know something of the symptoms of simple dyspepsia. â€" In fact, most peoâ€" | ple expect, and bear with resignation, ‘ an occasional attack of indigestion. | It is when the attacks come too often and stay too longâ€"when the sufferer becomes a dyspepsiaâ€"that he seeks relief. 1 Sometimesâ€"indeed oftenâ€"the trouâ€" ble is with the teeth, which have been neglected until they cannot properly chew the food . _ People who are worâ€" ried and overdriven are almost sure to have weak digestions. _ That form of dyspepsia yields quickly to a good rest and tonic treaement. If that cannot be had, try a brief rest just after eating. â€" That is a wise econâ€" omy for even the busiest people. Abâ€" dominal massage is good for toning up the muscles of the stomach. As for diet and medicine, the doctor in charge is the best judge, for no two cases are exactly alike.â€"Youth‘s Comâ€" panion. ‘ The Bath For Children Teachers in Khaki. 17. Note the instinct oy which Paul goes straight to the one cenâ€" tral fact of religion which can be reâ€" alized from "natural theology," the fact that God is good. _ He does not suggest that the Lystrans :might have learnt more from the bounties of nature. _ What they had actually inferred was the divinity of the sky ("Zeus" , which gave the rain and the plants that produced fruit. Hearts â€"Used as in 1. Sam. 25. 36, where there is the same combination with food and gladness. _ The last word, euphrosyne, is personified in Milton‘s L‘Allegro, and rendered as "heartâ€" cheer"â€"so the verb in Luke 15. 23. 16. In the generations gone byâ€" Had he been able to complete his arâ€" gument, it would have been on the lines of Acta 17. 30. _ Nationsâ€"The marginal Gentiles is better, for the word normally excludes the Jews, and Paul certainily did not regard his own people as having been left to the light of nature. They were for him a missionary nation, trained to take God‘s truth to the world. 14. Apostlesâ€"Note this wider use of the word, without restriction to the twelve. _ Rentâ€"A wellâ€"known and universal sign of grief and horror. 15. Like nature (margin)}: so read. Vain thingsâ€"Pointing to the sacriâ€" fice which would produce no effect. The classic picture of this "futility" is the great description of the priests of Baal at their worship in 1 Kings 18. 25â€"209. . That passage also vividly illustrates the contrasted thought of a living God. _ Who made, etec.â€"Paul lapses naturally into the familiar language of the Decalogue (Exod. 20, 11). But almost the same words can be quoted from the great monument of the Persian Kings on the Behisâ€" tun Rock: many "heathens‘" had a complete doctrine of God as Creator. To this germinal knowledge Paul makes his appealâ€"a true missionary, instinctively starting from the truth that these people did know. | 12. Zeus and Hermes (margin}â€"â€" of which Jupiter and Mercury are Latin equivalentsâ€"must be understood as the nearest Greek equivalents of the local Lycaonian deities. In Phrygia, not far away, these two gods were fabled to have come down to earth unrecognized, and to have been hospitably entertained by an old couple, Philemon and Baucis, who reâ€" ceived a blessing when they departâ€" ed. _ The people of Lystra were deterâ€" mined not to be caught napping this time! _ Ramsay well remarks, "True to the Oriental character, the Lycaonâ€" ians regarded the active and energeâ€" tic preacher as the inferior, and the more silent and statuesque figure as the leader." _ That Paul was here taken for Hermes, and in Acts 21. 38 for a brigand captain, sufficiently shows that tradition has made an abâ€" surd inference from 2 Cor. 10. 10 when it describes him as "short, baldâ€" headed and bowlegged." Chief speakâ€" erâ€"Hermes was the inventor of speech: god of eloquence. 18. The famous Cambridge manuâ€" script reads Zeus Propolis, that is, ZLeus the defender of the city; and this reading is very possibly right. Garlandsâ€"Used in Asia Minor as toâ€" day in India. _ Gatesâ€"Of the temple, near which the apostles happened to 11. They talked the Lycaonian patois among themselves, but could use and understand Greek in dealing with strangers. _ The apostles had no idea what they were saying: the "gift of tongues" did not help them. 10. _ Loud voiceâ€"Psychologically, the effect of this sudden and utterly unexpected shout would be to proâ€" duce a thrill of conviction, leaving no time for questions. _ It produced the initial "leaping up": when the power was recognized, he "went on walkâ€" ing"â€"note the force of the tenses. 23. 1). To be made wholeâ€"*"Saved,"| down in body or soul. _ Paul has the gift we! Bo call thoughtâ€"reading, often found still Polly in men who have the faculty of evanâ€"| was gelistic preaching in a preeminent deâ€"| see I gree. I se e i 23 9. Heardâ€"The tense may imply reâ€" peated hearing, or it may be pictorial, of listening throughout a discourse. Fastening his eyesâ€"â€"A favorite vivid verb of Luke‘s (Acts 1. 10; 18. 9; Verse 8. Lystraâ€"Six hours southâ€" southwest of Iconinum, on a tableland nearly four thousand feet above sea level. Hence came Timothy (Acts 16. 1). Satâ€"In some public place, where presumably he begged his livâ€" ing. \ THE SUNDAY LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSsON. MAY 21. m VIIL Acts 14 1 The Cripple 10 Cambridge manuâ€" Propolis, that is, of the city; and feet above sea He looked lonesome ar Timothy (Acu lonesome than he looked Text. at Lystra Foolish king! Yet he is only one of an innumerable multitude who have sought from the magicians and soothâ€" sayers a revelation of the hidden fuâ€" ture. _ Many who are otherwise sane pay money for this claptrap. Consider the materialist in many fields. _ "Soul" is an unknown word to him. There is the psychologist who looks in the liver. He says thought does not come {rom without, but is generated by the brain as the army. _ If the gall bladder lies tightly embedded in the groove of the right side it means that the King‘s army will be soon in the grasp of the enâ€" emy, and the omen is terrible. If it is embedded in the groove of the left side, however, the enemy will be in the grasp of the King soon. _ The omen could not be better. Sometim s the liver is the right place for us to look. _ Any liver will bear watching. _ Often the joy of livâ€" ing depends on the liver. _ Sometimes the physician looks, and wisely. The patient is gravely ill. There is a history of fast living. _ Everything points to the liver. _ The physician exâ€" amines and his surmisze is confirmed. sorting to divination, the liver of a slain animal is placed before him that he may read its protent. _ He believes that the liver is the seat of the soul and as all life is the gift of th egods, the liver as centre of mind and emoâ€" tion is the right and proper organ of divine revelation. _ If the gall bladâ€" der is swelled on the right side it means an increase in the King‘s army. If it is swelled on the left side it means an increase in the enemy‘s means an increase in the army. _ If the gall bladder lie embedded in the groove of t But the look in the liver which the text mentions is a look in the wrong place. _ King Nebuchadnezzar is at tempting to read the future. . Reâ€" "He looked in the liver xxi., 21. | _ "That‘s the place for my game,‘ Ithought Bobbie, "if I _ &n craw! ‘through the fence." Son Pays Father‘s Shortage. A remarkable case of filial devotion is that of a man who has recently made good a deficit in his father‘s accounts as treasurer of St. John‘s, New Bruns wick. The shortage was discovered nearly thirty years ago, after the treasurer‘s death,. The son, who has been a trusted employe of a life insurâ€" ance company in New York City for many years, bas now cleared his fathâ€" er‘s memory by sending the sum of $10,000 to the municipality, , Many Who Are Otherwise Sane Pay Mon Magicians and Soothsayers. Graduaily he is accustomed to variâ€" ous pieces of harness, until, when the time comes for him to be mounted by a man, instead of plunging about and having to be thrashed into submisâ€" sion, he sees at last what the whole thing is about, and thoroughly enters into the spirit of it. Then he is trained to charge at dumâ€" my figures, and he is always coaxed and soothed if frightened, and soon learns that the dummies do not harm him; and after that he is taught to knock them over. A course of noises of _ gradually _ increasing _ violence teaches him to keep his head, and he is finally put to charging figures stufâ€" fed with fireworks. Methods Adopted by Instructors of the British Army. The method of educating a horse is rather a lengthy process, and that folâ€" lowed by the horse instructors of the British army has answered splendidly. A horse is first taught to lie down at a given signal. Then he is taught to trot around a fieid; then to jump hurdles. He‘is always rewarded for doing well. Then, all red and warm with his pushing, he tried to pull his head out, but it would not come out. He was caught in a trap! For a momâ€" ent he tried with all his might; then he grew frightened and began to scream as loud as he could. Up the street, Polly and the otho children heard him an deame running to the spot. _ So did other persons, from all sides. _ Some of them pulled at Bobbie and some pulled at the It looked easy enough to get through the fence, but when Bobbie had pushed his head carefully through the largest hole in the iron latticework he found that he could get no farther. He tried his best to wriggle his fat shoulders through, but he could not do it. "I‘ll play a game of my own," he said to himself, as he toddled bravely down the steps to the sidewalk. Bobbie‘s mother had told his sister Polly to keep watch of him, but Polly was busy with her game and did not see him leave the steps. Down the street he made his way until he came to the place where an iron fence borâ€" dered the sidewalk. Through the latâ€" little lake where some swimming. ticework of which the fence was made, Bobbie_ could see a sloping lawn and 2 EOOET PCOE ETE IEIIE iP uit is B it tatsins Tss nds d 4 s c ce sc er children, nearly a dozen of them, most of the passengers got off and were playing games on the sidewalk rushed to the sidewalk. A policeman near by. . Bobbie knew that they were came hurrying from a nearâ€"by corâ€" older than he, but still he did not ner. Everyoné began to tell everyâ€" think it fair for them always to play one else what to do, but no one who games in which he could not join. ’;?bb':.rm-i:“‘tllt:imfu' l:;ndc on "I‘ll play a game of my own," he e puil him from the trap said to himself, as he toddled bravely| that held him. _ Bobbie‘s screams beâ€" down the steps to the sidewalk. came more terrifying. Little |BOYSEGIP PM,* ~9 GIBL o) te P Revelation of the Future. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Money Paid for Claptrap sobme‘s Adventure. {lcnce, but the harder they pulled the ttle Bobbie sat on the steps alone. louder Bobbie cried, and his head looked lonesome and â€"felt more would not come out. SCHOOLS FOR HORSEs Bobbic‘s Adventure. swans were Al | | 1 the othâ€"| A passing trolley car stopped and Ezekiel, me." _ To discus morals in terms of medicine is to end in confusion. To cast away all canons of beauty. To , pore over the liver when the spiritual ‘inluitiom-, with the literature and the is_vuums which they have evoked, are available for study is to ignore God, | heaven and immortality and make ctraight for death and the dung hill, Nebuchadnezrzar bogan by looking in . the liver, _ He ended by falling vioâ€" tim to a horrible insanity. . Believing |himself a bea=t, behold a king e-z grass like the ox! But we all open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are changed into ‘the same image from glory to glory, even as by the spirit of the Lord.â€" Rov. Danie! Russell, D. D. #1¢ I,Domed in int iAVOF, Least of all should one look in the liver for divine truth. _ Divination bee longs to primitive religions Why should we look in the liver when we have a Book, and a revelation in naâ€" ture. and in conscience, and in the face of Jesus Christ? When Peter The realist in art belongs to the cult of the liver. _ He holds the mirâ€" ror up to nature, he says. _ HMe forgets that a mirror can reflect only the viâ€"» ible. _ The essentials of truth in art and elsewhere are invisible to the eye of flesh,. _A lily is not pried open with a crowbar. _ The camera cannot reâ€" veal the soul. |_ Everyone was willing enough to let iher try, for all the others had tried and failed, _ With quick movements | Polly rubbed something from the bow! §d| over Bobbie‘s neck and the back ‘of his head, and also on the latticeâ€" \ work that held him. With a few | words she stopped his sobs and strugâ€" | gles. _ Then, having taken away his fear she gently worked away until Bobbie‘s head slipped through and he himself was free again, tearful but happy. dynamo generates clectricity. There is the historian who looks in the liv= er. _ He rules God out and makes naâ€" tional destiny depend on food, climate, geography. There is the moralist who looks in the liver. _ He says a man‘s disposition determines his destiny and his disposition may be determined by his liver, Judas and Czolgosz had been saved, perchance, by calomel. told her story, her mother said, "You did wrong not to watch Bobbie, as I told you, but I am proud that you actâ€" ed so quickly."â€"Youth‘s Companion. try "Well done!" said the policeman. "What kind of magic have you in that bow!?" "It is grease," said Polly, holding up the bowl. _ "I saw mother use it once to get off a tight ring, and 1 thought that if it was good for fingers it would be good for Bobbie‘s head." "So it was," said the policem;n:'“but your cool head was even better than the grease." Suddenly Polly darted up the street toward home. In a few moments she was flying back again with a bow! in her hand. What "I can do it!" she cried. _ "Let me When Polly led Bobbie home and DEMANDS OF MODERN WAR. M Me Looked in the Liv in the liver when we id a revelation in naâ€" mecience, and in the hrist? _ When Peter forecast the future is a mild â€" rebuke:â€" o thee? Follow thou to

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