Lawyer feoolrr)--Your Honor that's the mistake I made in the low.. a court, when I loot my can. Judge (interrupting long-winded Ir-r-cant you take it for grant- ed Out I understand an ordinary point d law t one missile gauged out his Pye and embedded use" in the frontal bone. Despite the Injury the ohaerver let so with his machine gun and drove " the enemy. The Pilot brought the machine back to the British lines and helped the ob. aorver to walk to the manual",: nation, where he cheerfully asked that his mother be informed that he val “slightly Injured." An army mndical omeer back in Lon- don from the front reported the case of a Royal Flying Corps observer whose eye was shot out. A German airmen got a shot at him on his tirst trip into the air over the German lines. "It sounded as tt some one were Playing I mandolin when the bullets came through the wires of our maettirte." he said. Irif’ih “MMdelkf-rke Is now in such I state that the (hrmans no longer take up quarters there. but prefer to live in dwelling holvs borrowed In the dunes." LOSES EYE ON FIRST AIR TRIP. be"! able to have their say hark:- Is a mass or ruins. I markable fact that 600 Pt tinue to crunch there. The even still attended by 80 But wary house has its nm refuge, such as the soldiers In the front lines. caslon hailed smaller shells on the, guns. The corners of houses are] gnawed away ", here end there a gable exhlblts great holes. But the damage u not very bad. at least not in Ostend Ind Zeebrugxe; much less than onel would have supposed. Even on the; seaside the towns appear to be little," damaged. The big bath hotel at Ei-) tend is untouched. and the great glass Kurhaus shows no breakage In its In- numernhle panes. "The real work of destruction be-, gins where the French land Imm- Mun? "notion that ha tine of stretch permitted to "ports on tt that have bee German. Have Germany read in the fat. of a When it is rennet Who were taken at. outrage had only a h to ttet ready to Co, t any when svparauw dren, ttoirte thev km Mons of the utmost misery, without food, liable to threeintt and to have others odious punishment at the hands of the tslave-drivers. They have been deported and curried off to work in the mines and factories of the Rhine- land and Westphalia. But the fact which is the moat appalling as those who have studied the question of German atrocities is that the women are employed in cooking for the Ger- man troops and as servants to the German officers. ( I enormous unexploded shell. hurled more by one of the " British war- tipg, and which now forms the orna- eutal centre of a Bower garden. "What on" sees in the way of des- uctlon Is the work ot the fast tor- do destroyers, which have on oe. nl-.. Lu", . -- _ a he Inhabitants have been forced by violence. by executions, imprisonment and deportation, to make trenches, bridges, roads 1nd railways, to.work in factories and mines, to make sand- bags for use in the trenches. They bve been forced to work during in- human hours for no pay, in condi- tions of the utmost misery, without I-n.l " I I A - - TRENCH “(we On the other hand, the Yellow Book contains these statements: The inhabitants have been forced by violence, by exeeutions, imprisonment Not to be Fooled hie. Stung by these criticisms, the Ger- lan olieiale, through neutral coma- pondente, are now doing their best to reply to the charges, but they really seem to be laying on the whitewash a little too thick. Out of three differ- ent versions as to why they did it none agree. save in presenting the enforced exile as a humanitarian ex- periment. something like the "eoms try-week" style of charity on . big scale. It is said by them, for in- stance, that they "wanted to give sunlight and fresh air to the factory hands in these industrial centers who lived in cramped garters"; that the English forced the seemingly barber- oua order “by bombarding Lille in a manner not according to the rules of war"; that the thing was done "to give free employment" to "conserve the food supply"; and that the'exiles in eortsequencv, "are well fed, happy aui sunbrowned'. though some chafe "because they do not like the simple country life and long for metropolitan high living." Of course-in Lille.' of out 22,000 French civilians, men, women, youth. and girls, from the ego cl fifteen up. m. wholesale exile! haa probably done more to arouse a i feeling of absolute horror in France l, than anything that has occurred since l the stories of the Belgian atrocities,l Int came to light. The French YeL ; low Book leaving nothing to the ima- I [ination in its bitter depletion of the enforced midnight exodus during " Holy Week. Tho account reads like ll some black page from the days of I savagely or the wars of the Babylon- f 4 m... Girmanr' vii; ai/rc, iiiiriii,t â€admiral! If“. tnd nearby towns Flier, "aimed. Shoots Foo, Lands, Cabin Mother. ny modical ottieer back In Lon- tl the front rgyorted the case Thou who no following certain Cid. blues of the war cannot but note with I degree of suspicion the cur- Ir, dispctchu tlat no now coming NOTES ANDCOMMENTS I " viprmttent who has Just been _ to visit the Belgian coast in the formidable defences v been raised there. A long barbed wire entanglement along the count. and an and. Have Formidable on Belgian Cont. mmulent who has to visit the Bell Hung the coat, and an end. , ot long slender ships' ttde from the coarse grass! as. and behind the dunes ht-dvy howitzers. mud dwellings of bomb, rem form part of the great lg the entire coast, he says.‘ is unguarded. Everywhere I lim- is occupied by sailors. id when one comes nor-nu Is remembered that those taken at n‘ght in the Lille " only a brief time in which ' to go, that mothers went r separated from their chit, , they knew not where, the that are now coming from ead like an ill-timed jest of a great tragedy. [ smaller shells on the urnors of houses are here 9nd there a gable ales. But the damage remom bered led by 80 children. has [lg underground nf-h_lzv.nd guns hays soldiers eoiiitiuG Ins. It is a re 600 people con. _ The school is SEA LINE. comes BCI'OSS Midder Defences n end- ships' grass dunes "My dear, if I had it to do ovmguin and decided to marry. you would be the one lwonld select.†_ A Careful Answer. "Darling, if you had it to do all over again would you gtitl want to mury met" "You expert." "You might say sis, mum. Or if you wishes to follow the plan so pre- valent these days of giving everything a special tttune----" tramp? These pathrns may be oh from your local McCall deal, from the McCall Company, 70 St , Torcnto, Ontario. straw. The trimmil type of hat is general or ribbon arrange'. in manner. Color is sane ofthrlar~n"' " dress wear, cspea'nlly younger girls. 7332 Graceful Russian Dress. sizes. White. satin crowns with black velvet brim: are highly favored, as well as the ttlltlack and all-white hats. Sometimes the order is res versed and the crown is made of black velvet with the trun _of white satin or - "in Status. "What are you, my man, a plain , w tttte v'lass beads on dark blue gorge 'is another very effective suggestion. I The Popular Bats. } Any number of white and colored felt hats in both small and large shapes are worn at present. The trimmine is either a ribbon band, plain or plnited, or fruit or flowers cut out of silk or velvet and placed arainst the crown or on the brim. White hats of silk or satin with a "i/ir: of chiffon around the brim are ! also considered very smart. Some are ' “rimmed with a large bow of white! I satin directly in front. t ocettsions than sports are in large sail- or shapes, also in small and medium White glass be is another very 7336 White and Blue Linen Combined. darker dresses that are brought out or. cooler days. Purple on black, and gold or mustard color on dark. him, give exceptionally good results. t" Lt.: on , ! Two striking models adopted by the younger net are reproduced here. In I one of white and blue linen, the waist â€and upper part of the skirt were of . {white linen and the sailor collar, col: : {and lower part of the skirt were blue. I Very large pockets were placed on "rither side. The Inner the pockets _ the more up-to-date the dues, now-e- ‘days. This dress, like many of the; {present models, hangs from the shoul- piers and is therefore ideal for sports. (The other dress is in Russian ltyle. It is of rose-colored silk jersey with (black collar, cuffs and belt, and but- Itoned all the way down the front with G,Uii black buttons. The waist has Ibex plaits in the front and back stitch- fed as far as the waistline and left free 'below it to give more fulness to the lower part. Colored embroidery and heads are particularly favored for trimmino Hm might call me an inefficiency The trimming Lia t" Pr"""" V .. nvr- 'ie 36m!- ', espeeially in those for the angel in some attractive Tolcr is introduced in season hats used for other generally a wing fine; THE FASHIONS McCall dea.lé1;ma;; pay be obtained on this lu neaus are trimming the Bond If aman loves tk' give up cigars fur h loves him she will no _-__ "W“, “nu “nu; "We had a bad aedident jest afo we leave re depot dis mornin', boss, an' do liminator done got busted off, right at de handle. Will you take 'em frial same as dis hyar gemmen?" In another moment he came back once more, leaned e?ntidenthmy and penitently over the table, and said: "We had a bad aedident jest afo we '-, --- ' . .. The second man then called after the waiter and remarked: "Just el'minate the eggs." "Yassa." In a moment the waiter came back. “Sense me, boss, but jest what did you all say erbout dem aigs?" “I said just, eliminate the eggs." "Yassa." And he hurried again to the tiny kitchen. "Geortrv, you may bring me two fried eggs, some broiled ham, a pot of coffee and some\rol!s. ' "Yassn." . The other said: "You may bring me the same." "Yassa." A Delicate Instrument. Two men were in the dinin, crdering breakfast. The first said to the waiter: f This is a valuable hint when the skin of the back has become sore through long lying in bed. Beat the whites of two eggs for a length of time with a desert spoonful of spirits of wine until it thickens. Put it into a small pot and tie it down for use. When wanted spread a little of this on linen and apply it to the part where the skin is broken. Pat on a little fresh mixture when the ointment he- ccmca stiff or dry or uncomfortable. It will give tho greatest possible re-l lief. One tenspoonful of glycerine taken in awine-glass of water three t'mes a day for a fortnight will cure the most: obstinate case of indigestion. Whether the concussion is slight or serious, the room where the patient lies should be darkened and kept very ,quiet, the sufferer should rest on a bed with his head kept low, and cool bandages and an ice cap should be ap- plied to his head if possible. Warm applications to other parts of the body are often useful. On no account talk to the patient, beg him to speak, or try to get from him an account of the accident. He will probably never l have any remembrance of "Youth"'; Companion. ‘prolonged and deep, and when con- sciousness returns there is often nausea with vomiting, dizziness, pains in the head, and even convulsions. The other symptoms are those always as. sociated with sshoek-a subnormal temperature, aweak pulse and slow respiration. If it is a mild concussion, the un- consciousness will soon wear off, al- though the child may complain of headache for some time, and show un- usual irritability of temper. In more severe cases the unconsciousness is or nearly so do not make vigorous ef- forts to get him to speak, or shake him in an effort to rouse him. Carry him to a qaiet room ,and let h'm lie there until the doctor comes. When a child falls and hurts him- self, he is inclined to cry vigorously; when he does so, his elders may feel reassured, for loud crying and seri- ous accidents do not often go toge- ther. But when the child lies still instead of rising, and is unconscious, is followed by a period of uncon- sciousness, however brief, or by diz- ziness and headache, watch the suffer- er carefully for a time, for the condi- tion is one of shock, although the shock may be very slight. I Concussion of the brain is avery 'slight, matter. or avery serious one, I according to the part of the head that lhas been struck. It is an accident [that may very easily happen to chil- dren in their play, and therefore those who have charge of the young should understand its symphoms. The blow that causes the concussion is very likely to be at the back of the head; that is the case when the child falls backward from a chair, or slips and falls on the ice. When such a. fall IS a woman of very pronounced personality. The da I Charles Tennant, she was an Mim, Margot Tennant And high spirits. She we; I. member or the wen-know the heroine of Mr. Benson'a famous "Dodo" was alao ' austelted by the aubjoct of our picture. Mm. Aaquitt {an appreciation of all things “undo. IS a woman of very , ru.-_|_A Inn, . Concussion of the Brain. loves ttwoman, he Health Notes. ‘ her. But if shi, not ask it. A New Photo of Mrs. Herbert H. Asquith dining car may Dy 6112-] "I was astonished," he said, "to eaufter- (find great numbers of Russian sol- Ie condi- Idlers clothed from head to foot in igh the uniforms made in Japan, not only the ’tunic and trousers, but even the leg- rts him- gings. They carried on their shoul- orously; liiii; Japanese guns. Their cartridge nay feel ibelts were filled with cartridges made nd seri-iln Japan. Their leather belts and to toge- Ibuckles were from Japan. And the ies still Istout hob-nailed shoes they wear are nscious, :from hides gathered in Korea and mus er- "nade into shoes in Japan. So that,, r shake {there you see a Russian soldier in Carry Japanese clothes, Japanese shoes,) h'm lie 'with Japanese gun, Japanese ant-) munition and Japanese ar.o.utrement) the un- Korea Aids With Hides. g 93'. a", "It is strange,†he went on, "thati m of l Russia went to war with Japan over' tow un- l Korea, and now Korea, the source of n more ',all the trouble, is supplying Russia 1933 " ’with the shoes in which her soldiers , ’n con- ,are marching to victory. Korea is a j Oftenggreat grazing country and is prov-) l, pains ling a vast reservoir of raw hides ', 1s. The (which the Japanese are rapidly turn- " tytt .'h",i.inir, into boots, shoes, saddles, andi', one the "That I a, mm; a; siiiiU,iriiiii the beaming reply. "What did my little daughter learn this morn_ing?" asked the fond father. Dora had Just returned from Sun.. day school, where she had been for the first time. l "No, and the report is not correct." 'said the observer. "The Russian ar- "illery officers are directing their own fire and are getting splendid re- sults. The only Japanese and French ofrieers are those temporarily assign- ed to explain the worlings of a new niece, just as an expert is sent. alone to explain any complicetrd piece of machinery. Japar.ere experts ac- companied the big 12-ineh Japanese guns, not to manoeuvu them in re- tion, but to explain how it was to be manoeuvre). That is the extent of the} help, and the Ruwians she.“ get full credit for what thty have "cvcrnplished in operating their ar- tillem No, the Japanese have done remarkably in arming, clothing and, munitioning the Russians, but theyi have not had a chance to do the? fighting." I "It is said that French and Japan"-" cse officers are now furnishing the expert direction of the Russian artil- lery fire, which has made .it so ef- fective. Did you see any of these officers?" was asked. superlative Service. Angry Diner--waiter,you arenot fit serve a pig! Waiter-Mn doing my bat, air. ( "All sorts,†was the reply, "from the service rifle and small field pieces up to the big 12-inch guns. The Jap- anese 12-inch is a terfible weapon, and they are content not to make any of the 14-inch and 16-inch guns, as they consider, from a military stand- point, that the immobility of the Ron- ster Run offsets its advantages, whery the 12-inch is a mobile gun and very deadly." _ "What sort of arms and munition is Russia getting from Japan?" was asked. l "It was noted," said he, "that about the only vital point where the' Ger- mans had not been able to send their submarines was in the waters of the East China Sea, the Straits of Korea and the Sea of Japan. These are the waters separating Japan from Rus- sia and the Asiatic mainland, and the routes over them, commercial and military, are open and without men- ace." leather furnishings. “How did these supplies get from Japan to the Russian front?" the observer was asked. l Cznr's Soldiers. _ I ' 31. Seeking to kill-Here clearly "set about killing";- the beating had The extent to which Japan is rty?t.hintr less in mind from the first. clothing, shoeing, arming and muni- /rltis passage illustrates John 7. 1, tioning the Russian army was forei- where no mere plot is suggested. bly presented to a military otmerver)Ctune up-To the fort Antonia, built who has just returned to Paris from (so as tr command the temple, during a trip along the Russian front. 1.ftyt times especially. How humil- "r n"... ..,.;,.._:A,LA;" u .. wat *-A2, A, . . .. Military Observer Aswnished to Find What She Is Doing for Caar's Soldiers. \ CLOTHE AND ARM RUSSIAN SOLDIERS. WHAT hPM B DOING IN THE WAR All Sorts of Arms Supplied. Her Reply. 'ennant renowned for her Wit H-known "acct" of Souk, luck ' alao suppoaed to have been Asquith has a. very fine and The daughter of the late md «a TORONTO T 40. The daring ot the man, turning to Nee the mob that had nearly done for him, combined perhaps with an- banishment at his rapid rally from the state to which they had reduced h'm. A. great teiienee--One thinks of the "great calm" in Mark 4. 89. Th. 1 39. A possible alternative punctua- tion (see paraphrase) connects in Cilicia with the next clause. No mean eity--'Nrsv.s was a. famous Beat of learning, and iutrtituit her citizens' pride in her. Citizen is emphatic: he was a full bursa-as, as was his father before him. - -..- â€my-v tere i'rt referred to Josephus tell, us , of lmnditti found even in Jerusalem who urp-t abcut wich concealed dag- gers and committed murder unimped- } ed. The word here used-the Latin; word tsiearius--is derived from the, word for "dttgtrer." - i _ ,. ---V .v-vunu I“. Olives aborde which in one plat: he erctintates at thirty thousand; but in in another at no more than one thors, and- Luke: takes out into the desert frvr thousand practiced eut-throptm The two episodes in the [wizard chief's career are evidently distinct. The w:yerness---compare Meth 24. Tft. Assassins-Un one of the chap- tere imt referred to Jog-nim- an. ..- I'peuple m Egypt could write Greek. I 38. The 1ijeyptian---,rosephus tells {us about him-how he collecful a ‘mass of penile on the Mount of Olives ‘to see the walls of Jerusalem fall down, and how Felix attaered him. he escaping, but his people being mostly killed or wounded. Luke'e independ- ence of Josephus is well seen hc-e. The latter brings to the Mount of Olives aborde which in one plan he (intimates at thirty thousand; but in in another at no man Hum m... At., __ l M. Away with him--A vernacular .phrase found in a rude papyrus let- (ter, compare Luke M. 18; Acts 22. 22, [and in astill harsher tense John 19. 15. 37. Dost thou konw Greek-in the official description of the brigaml (see above) it would be stated that he knew no Greek. He must have come from an out-of-the-way part, for the ,papyri show us that very uncultured. people in Egypt could write Greek. j} 33. The reason why Lysias put him , instantly in a double set of irons ap- T pears later on. A notorious brigand y chief was badly "wanted," and the of- I ficial description of h'm, circulated in all likely places, contained something ‘which Lysias recognized in Paul. [There was accordingly the evidence of ‘a prize, and the prisoner must be 1'Ctlr kept. The description would ,began with name and age, and would (then mention shape of nose, kind of 'hair, and especially a Bear somewhere. ‘It this scar was on the head or face, lwe can guess from Acts 14. IO (63L! Ak 17) how Paul and the brigand hadl Is mark in common. i M Paul was very possibly almost! ‘unconscious after the savage beating, i and unable to keep his feet as the mob I ‘surged up behind. The rapidity or, his recovery reminds us of Acts 14. 20. As we might infer from his sur- viving all that we read in last week's lesson, Paul mus‘ have had an iron constitution: h’s "thorn in me flesh" and the alleged "weakness" (that is, unimposing figure) of his! "bodily presence" are not in the least , inconsistent with this. l l'er mush specially watch against libreaches of the peace at times when .‘men are offering special Worship to ‘God; Military tribune (marsrainr- Literally, "eommander of a thous- 'and," ten times as many men as a "centurion." Of course this like co- hort (margin), is a Greek term for a Roman institution, and is only ap- proximate. Claudius Lysias (see ‘Acts 23, 26 for his name) commanded ‘a division of six hundred men or! unore. 32. Forthwith-For a sufficient force was always kept under arms: the policing of such a turbulent city was no light task . ,, _,...-., “runny. nuw numu- Hating to believers in region to read (so often in history that the civil pow- 'er mush sneoinllv “mm. ".-..s.'.,.,x 30. Doors were shut-For, of course, the intended murder must not be ac- complished in sight of the sacred building any more than the “price of blood" might be put in the treasury within it (Matt. 27. 6). The priestly conscience is always very particular about technical sins, and never more so than when busy with crime. 29. Trophimus-gee Acts 20. 4. This Ephesian was a very intimate friend. However little Paul now be- lieved in "holy places," or in any dif- ference between man and man before God, he was not likely to trample on religious sentiment by doing such a thing. Superssititiod is never to be strayed by insulting it. 28. Itrea1---Cornrmre whnt was said last week on 2 Cor. It. 22. The ap- peal is male to Jews who really have " heart the sanctity of the temple. Against the people-This count is ad- ded to that which had proved fatal to Stephen Meta 6. 18). It meme that Paul was always libeling his own peo- ple, indoraintt he universal Gentile verdict upon them. We who have his own letters know what to think of the l ‘charge. Greeks-The genernlallz-‘ ing plural. The story that Paul had l been Been with one Gentile could b, I "relied uponâ€! Hath deflled--The tense is changed to the perfect, whtth l implies a permanent profanation. The verb (that of Acts 10. 16) sug- gests that the temple thus became "common," its awful aloofness de- strqui. l B. 9 has some similarity, but our knowledge of the ritual usage knot exact enough to clear up the point. The Jews from "er- Who would re- cognize Trophimus. Act. 21. wut. Golden Text.-Aets 22. 15. Verse 27. The seven dqir--A dif- ihsalt purse, since our Jewish auth- orities imply that a Nair“. vow would Ilast thirty days " lent. Num.' INTERNATIONAL LEMON BQYSQ GI S INTERNATIONAL LESON SEPTEMBER 10. l Xt." T Act. " Text., Patti.-- era, teachers, instructors. The men who knew took the place of the men who had to noâ€. The whole hiebory of progreu above this. Ita founde- tions are In the eternal realities. Angels were in the world before the days of Euclid, u wee cavitation be- fore Slr Ieeec Newton. These men, end lea ct like â€not. were “new. not a discovery. It deals with sp'rlt, soul, mind, and for man to be told all gills shows the kindness and the love ‘of God, who h" ever been showing men Aa they could understand them, mighty tr I in all realm. of thought, 'de,', in earth and sec, in air nnd sky, In the physical realm, in the mental mlm, in pure and in ap- plied branch†of art, science and philosophy. The world has not been left without tta chm witnesses, lead 'eident, or luck, or combination of c r- cumstanccs, or experience Our fa th is m a God revealed by His holy prophets which hath been since it be- gin. God, man, law, duty, deal-"my, eternity. Sin is the transgression of the law cf God; it is the discord In the h'nmnny of the moral world. This is one of the cent-al truths made known In the B ble. Man is thsNin- her; he cannot save himself, nor can he be saved by a fellow sinner. As he is intended to live in a sinlese world, with a holy God on! perfect spirits, he needsto be saved Worn sin. This is not all. He needs to be cleam- _ ed frrm sin; made clean, so as to be _ made fit for a home in a pure heaven. l To accomplish this eternal peace it! was needful for God to send His son, I or. saith M. John, to redeem the Inn-M . The Clxr'stian relig'on is of revela- 'ein, It is not known through evolu- tion or discovery, or cleverness, or ac- Man Cannot Save Himself, Nor Can 3 An interesting sidelight on Fresh] _- dent Wilson's remark about thel d world going mad is given in the an-[ '- nual report of Dr. William Graham,! t of Belfast, one of the most highly re-= n’puted Irish alienists. Dr. Graham! 0 presents a remarkable picture of thet - itonie value of war. He says: I -' "It has become common practice â€since August, 1914, to say the world . It growing mad, and there is a wide-j _ spread popular notion that the dis-I . tress and agony of a conflict so ter-l , rible as the present one must end l I in a profound disturbance and alien-1 ' ation. Yet the fact is indisputable ', that insanity, like earns, has lessen-J ed during the period of the war." " Improve Health of Men. M So far as the future is eoneerned,y Dr. Graham is equally encouraging. t He says: "There are solid grounder for the hope that, especially ttlrt though exclusively among women,', we shall find a great diminution ini; those neurotic disorders that form', a part of the mental abnormality l of thousands of men who have gone, [ h " are preparing to go. to the front, g who have all their life been sub- b ject to the bondage of neurasthcni: " weakness and incapacity of psy- ( it ehaathenie fears or hypochon- I' driao fancies. They have never i, ‘known what it is to live, but at the,h country's call they have flung fromiol off them the spell of ancient inhabit-; ations and long established 'mprac-l ticalities and have gone forth to Fly face wounds and death. Only when' summoned to possible surrender of) life have they learned how wonder-l th ful life really is. The physical re- bt ONE OFTHE CENTRAL mums Presents Remarkable Picture of the Tonic Value of Great - CdMiet, WHAT AN IRISH ALIENIST HAS TO SAY. LESS INSANIT Y I)lJllNl THE WAR same God was working upon both tempests. Spake unto them in the Hebrew huttrtuure--Not the old bibli- cal language, which was extinct for spoken use, but Aramaic, wich Jesus and the disciples usually employed. The next morning the cake win nil (one, save for a few crumbs lying on the ground.' "Let us leave a slice for the fury." said Robert. So they cut: I. slice and left it on a stone just inside the open- ine to the cave. On on. of their visits, which theyl made on the day when Robert wu six l Yetta old, they were allowed to talas, their luncheon with them, and in the, luncheon was a little cake baked er-l peclally for that dny. l Robert end But wen - - ,cited. They hed found nave in the mountain back of their unmet home, on the side facing the eee. It no a very smell taer--too and! for either of them to crew] into,--but they could lee that it we very deep. What might them not be living in it? A dragon, perhaps, or, better still, . 1 real fairy! Indeed, before they found 1 the cave, Robert had seen 1 little grey I figure moving about near br--' tuurss I of just the size, am said, when he; described it ulterwerds, that tuition i were supposed to be. i mpnsn this eternal peace it dful for God to send His son, St. John, to redeem the world. This is tt Revelation, 'ax J}; iree,2 N RI /, Cd V , 9 'ei' aa. ar li!iti .4; ay a?» 'tpil agrrig.’ I SP) I. (ll, iiiiiet"'ttl att fi " u The Cave P-ttr. In: "u""WreFBtott or en; as an all wise Godt The leg.- is the diseordnt the tion, mission. purpose of Jesus, in moral world. This by faith Once believe the Bible and nt-al truths made the mighty creed: of Christina men e. Man is tha’sin- all all the word tand in an order. I ,ve himself, nor can believe in God as revealed to me in the fellow sinner. A? Bible. and the world around me, the 9 live in a sinleu sky .bove me and the perplexities of 137 God anal perfect the past as well u the astounding , be saved Crom sin. things I see and read are made bear- , needs to be cleans- abie--whrt a e.1ean, so a; web's. The Lentlon of 1m. cum. P m a pure “" i Jesus had a divine lention. m. 'il, item: game it :divine. end He tended to nun the o le,',"'; , ',','i'l.'iai that the life which now in is not o re T." e w" the whole life of man, but one of pro- Reveiatimt, lpnrntion for life in other eon imam: It deals with ispiit, What He has other word- to week, but . man to be told ill " cannot hear them, understand them, dues: and the love "tow. In, vain Inn. wants to luv. ever been ehowint .n ' __, . Sinner. . F-.. -" "In“. W DIV. all and. plain hem, at one. and low in Hn the realm of religion. Does In find thin the law, the practloo. In any other mun? Truly not, The ' :tlon of "sun wu to show u. the Path- 'er,to touch us HU will md give no In“ to do it and no and hauling for the soul. Mun bola; nlplrltual be. ing, a revelation from the splrlt world no not a, high probability only. if he were to live In Il’ll'lt land It was and it lo a Why of thought, an In- dlsponuhle thing. Other fouuhtton can no mu: Icy than thIHesul Christ, tlrst, Inldtt. 1nat--tn Whom at but the world shalt no the fulneu of the blood-m of tho "ara-t Gad..-. liter, wuy... “by erets. But they could nct demon- sf'rate the being o fGod or the eternity of His law ,or that He made man, or that by sin death came into the world and that Jesus Christ cane .-) saw all men from sin. I ask, Who so like- ly to know eternity as an Eternal God? Who so likely to save sinner- by a plan irtexpiientrte by philosop- l Sickness is often Hazy people. Every woman thinks the in I prim donna when it come! to putting I baby to sleep. into tho rerrui r' uf their own win. 'Y, u ir. my»: Fall int' he but yd!- i, C, my! rn 'ncss “one knows VII†F.," 2.:(151 Ly it. But he put them out of ly: “was all right." Minus Rifle, Scot Went at Ene-y j With Bare Hands. f A wounded officer now in this rcountry says that when his men " 1tacked a number-6rd their rifles shot or blown out of eir hunda, any; the Edinburgh Scotsman. Yet they 'went thrmWh, and "to see those chap. :0! mine : ~35!ng the Basin " ;thcir bar:. 'mls we orth living for '--or dying fr 2 It B, tent and drink to me. They just tum, their In. down, and “row-he". their own rm. from than. On, Lig section con- mander of mine Tm just like I Mes rier with rats. v cat that he didnt wait for killing. We we: too b". He wart toy his men like a blooming larnr,irrhter, 2'm.1'hed 'em down. grubbwl ', 't by the slick d the luroovllrs ':, l the neck, and clinch! 'em ltm-l; aver the parapet. to MI I Wonen Leon at Life. "Especially 'surniiieant is the change coming over the lives of wo- men of the middle classes. Then sheltered daughters of the merchant, (of the professional mun. victim of (mid-Victorian traditions of gentilitv. lsre now felling into line with their sisters of the higher and the hum- [bier social ranks, and are discovering ithst life is something meter than the latest novel or a (sine of tennis, :or even the tepid gossip of the church ,sewing meeting. Idleness and ennui lUve lost their hold. Herrlthy and unigelfish activity is now the presmib. ing fashion smong war-enfrsnchised women. It hss set them free from the benumbing conventionalities that threatened to tstifle their psychic energy, sad so far it has contributed to the soundness of mind and nerve among the mighty sociological forces which the present nrorltieotmict set in motion." l, Bo the two chum mt home In,- (PF, and told their mother that they ‘felt sure they had really noen the - itlnt lived in the tarve.-Youth'. Com- pinion. zine under which there men ere compelled to live can have nothing but the but elect on than subject to its discipline. 1:iiit,eLtAettttea1te, newbope. .8uddenly their eere and“ mule in (tttetG,mftieh.tyrtotethnohnd indeed such e dent spot. Robert (raped Cure bend, for, felthoucbhevue bombeweejuete 1 little frightened. The sound. coated. .then they bean mm; and then, out ,oltheceveendetrelghtouttoeee Mew - bird. i “We only an old lee gull!" cried inch-rt, Minted and dietaeted. But Ben tightened her hold on her brother'e head. "Robert," Ibo new, "I don't believe We eeee cell " all; but the fury hereelf in cumin! mm. never like to heve enyone Md out when they live. What could be enter than for e fury to change her cloek into my fathers?†He Be Saved By a Fellow. “no fairly In. eaten It.†nrtsitrper" Sun. "O Hobart. paw-mu lhe'll com. out My!" THE MAN WHO SAW RED. w panpet. to roll " F: manual â€wake: uh “I in Thosual} an! of t otncul I‘ll-III. h Brit Illa PM he Retro JliLl FOE " W tr “I El ati