ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Ys. 39â€"41. Then came the great sacrament in the wilderness. At Jesus‘ command the people were made to sit on the grass in orderly groups, reâ€" sembling flowerâ€"pots in gardens. Jesus takes the slender provision which they had, the five loaves and the two fishes, _ YÂ¥szx. 39â€"41, sacrament in swer was: "How many loaves have you on hand? Go and see." seives," i> said. The disciples did not understand the Master‘s thought, and bofun to point out all kinds of diffiâ€" culties. It would cost more than two hundred denarii, that is, more than fifty dollars, they said, to procure enough fcod to go round. Jesus anâ€" menora selves," Â¥$. 6a, ob. Jesus spent the whole day in teaching, and the approach of evening found the multitede still ranging on his words. At this stage the discip‘cs intervened. They wore anxious as to what would happen if night overtook the people in that soliâ€" tary place. They suggested the disâ€" missing of the people to the nearest farms and villages that they might procure food. WILDERNES3, 20â€"44 Â¥s. 35, 36. Jesus s day in teaching, and t evening found the ranging on his words. the discip‘cs intervene spent IL tus a WILDER: foot learn of me In heart." e n#, too, was weary, andâ€"though tbe] disciples did rot yet knowithisâ€"heI krew that his davs in Galilee were: numbered. So he propesed to them this quiet retreat beyond the Lake. His desire was rest, rest for his disâ€" ciples, and rest for himsolf. We shall see presently that this hops was not to be fulfilled. Meantime it may be of interecst to observe that in the judgâ€" ment of some modern scholars the | words of Jesus here given have been| handed down to us in ï¬nothci'llog:‘, ‘i,n{ the great passage, att. 19 5 "Come unto me, all ye who labour and‘ are heavy laden, and I will give you resi. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for 1 am meek and lowly Fuse Y lc ail o 1. JESUS‘ COMPASSION ON THE MULTH TUDE, $1â€"34. V. 31. The words of Jesus to the disciples, "Come ye, yourselves, apart into a desert place, and rest awhile," were spoken at the moment of their return from their mission to the cities of Israel. The disciples came back fasked and excited as the result of their labors, and Jesus saw that they noeded to have their minds composed. al life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth In me shall never thirst.â€"Mark to the disciples that they may lm m them to the people. m said about a miraculous m of the loaves, though on-d:hgd the m en mm en !Hnd is M,]W what arch 11. Lesson X1,â€"Jesus Feeds follows. The a?flamd the Multitudes,â€"Mark 6: atulthamt iulzi-ud the spiritâ€" Golden Textâ€"I am the bread of 22 In view of this circumstance we : ought to think of the wholo proceedâ€" life: he that cometh to me shall ing, not after the nalogy of a secular never hunger; and he that believeth or‘;'e.l meal, but as resembling rather In me shall never thirst.â€"Mark ‘a Communion Service. The bread repâ€" y [ mminet W hes, Wast M i is something? "!:l',':" C;l._‘;:â€um Te PME “LL"'iproperly' say that it was the feast in um |the coming kingdom of God. Jesus THE CREAT SACRAMENT IN THE| wa, giving his followers a last, solemn . WILDERNESS, 35â€"41. assurance that God meant to redeem | [xTRopucrionâ€"The feeding of the |his people. Though he was himself Ititude marks the culminating point| going away from his Galitean followâ€" the Galilean ministry of Jesus. It ers, God would not fail them. They k place at the moment when Jesus | would yet inherit the kingdom, of 8 leaving Galiles, and setting his which the feast in the wilderness was e stedfastly ww".f,d.' Jerusalem. It but the foretaste or sign. 1 m amksmescs C meseae ts onl ce s P MUTT AND JEFFâ€"Bud Fisher. . So Jesus. instead of rest bor. When he saw the multiâ€" the shore, instead of fecling ntment as he might well hava which are minutely described (1) He Sunday School mz-m*:'s.-':.m e ® h s t 12e c oc es 8 ouse e dn "", Our Fa.sdhion Book, ï¬fï¬ï¬:iilng t?ï¬ R s newest and most practical style, w ':\" "“'}:;‘;"’ h;n?:fdth:fm:ï¬it-’ | be of interest to the home dressmaker, he shore, instead of fecling | Price of the book 10¢ the hok 2 4 ment as he might well have HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. was moved with compassion| â€" Write your name and address plainâ€" hem, because they were as| ly, giving number and size of such vâ€hl‘ s L;h'-;f’h?"d~t 11.:‘_9 patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in j atI\ 1‘;;1 xr:v;t "";‘;‘3 ai’:::;e;; stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap uy of thenm wers without| it carefully) for each number and provision _for the’ir needs, address your orter to Pattern Dept., he heart of Jesus, and we| Wilson Publishing Co.. 73 West Adeâ€" once again "he began t,o,laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by i wmany things." Our Lord| return mail. s palieut, always hopeful., sonnmnmnmmmnstn ffeereemmmmrmemizess ‘ lling to spend and to be is Father‘s service. { "~MWonbimee KERE Tifcersacl edom AT ‘esus answer is for ever Give them food yourâ€" ._ The disciples did not : Master‘s thought, and _out all kinds of diffiâ€" SACRAMENT IN THE La Fontaine was proverbially abâ€" sentâ€"minded. When he was to make & ceremonial presentation of his "Fables" to Louis XIY, he discovered, after delivering a very fine address, that he had forgotten to bring the book. "I am not writing," he says, "in a bad temper, but am trying to kindle some glimmer of conscience in those who are fairly wellâ€"toâ€"do people but who give halfpennies instead of sixâ€" penny bits. This ‘coppétitis‘ seems to be infectious, for it is certainly spreading." ' Taunton, Eng.â€"Caustic comments on growing "copperitis" of church collections in his church are made by the Rev. R. Lowman Lang, vicar of Holy Trinity, in a letter to parishâ€" loners. He says under cover of secrecy of a hat people contribute a copper, and on January 1 there was no fewer than 240 halfpennies in the collection. Collection Hat Reveals Spread of "Copperitis" patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your orter to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co. 73 West Adeâ€" laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. mt 2l 7 tw s s PP 4s Ad No. 1708 is cut in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust Size 40 reâ€" quires 4% yards 36â€"inch, or 3 yards b4â€"inch material, and % yard 36â€"inch contrasting. Width at lower edge, with plaits drawn out, about 2% yards. Price 20c the pattern. This smartly simple ono-fieoo frock has plaits at each side,of the front and back, a becoming convertible colâ€" lar, short sleeves finighed with cuffs, or long sleeves gathered into wristâ€" bands, and a belt at the ;i.d';s No. 1708 is cut in sizes 36. 38. 4 A NEW DAYTIME FROCK 4i Roots in Horse Rations. 4 Idle horses during the winter seaâ€" l' son receive benefit from roots as a part of the ration. Feeding tests at |some of the Experimental Farms indiâ€" |cate that a very good maintenance raâ€" tion consists of one pound ow mixed hay, one pound of clean cut &traw, and one pound of turnipsâ€"for every one hundred pounds of the horse‘s weight. This constitutes a day‘s raâ€" tion. Carrots are even better than turnips because they are more relishâ€" ed by the horses. During a 150â€"day perlod from November 1st to March 3ist, six work horses keut on thls[ feed gained in weight an average ot| 28 pounds. During the first two weeks of the test the ration that had been used whilo the horses were working was gradually reduced to the winter quantities. With the approach of spring the last two weeks were used to build up the ration to a norâ€" mal working diet. Bulletin 94 of the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa, "’Growing and Feeding Field Roots," deals very thoroughly with the subâ€" ject indicated in the title. The report states that for brood mares there is no better adjunct to the ration than roots, the succulent tonic and laxative properties are then of peculiar value as is the ease of digestibility. Roots For Sheep. A moderate ration of roots, particuâ€" larly swede turnips, are of great beneâ€" fit to breeding ewes an dthe lambs ;_ grain received. This byâ€"product is reâ€" t |cleaned and classifiecd into recleaned y |elevator screcnings, oat scalpings, n |and refuse screenings, a classification s | which although s{}l1 unofficial, is reâ€" n .cognized by the Grain Inspection Deâ€" n 'partment and complied with by most ’f of the elevators. A new Dominion ~ |Department of Agriculture pamphlet Â¥ on Screenings as a Feed for Live g |Stock gives the composition of the grades. By far the most important grade is the one named recleaned eleâ€" vator screenings. It contains about 50 to 70 per cent. of wild buckwheat, 20 to 40 per cent. of broken or shrunkâ€" en wheat, some wild oats, and not over 3 per cent. of smal weed seeds. When finely ground it has been proved by experimert to be a very valuable feed for growing and fattenâ€" ing pigs and for fattening steers. The second grade, oat scalpings, contains about 75 per cent. of wild oats, 15 per cent. of domestic oats, a small perâ€" centage of barley and an occasional wheat kernel. It has a feeding value distinctly inferior to that of recleanâ€" ed elevator screenings. The third grado, refuse screenings, consists of small weed seeds, chaff and the dust and dirt accumulating from recleanâ€" ing. It has been found to be of little or no feeding value in the rations of swine. Besides theso three grades, a fourth grade, called elevator screenâ€" ings, is used. It includes any screenâ€"| ings, not falling into the first three j classifications, provided the required minimum percentage of wild buckâ€" i wheat and wild oats are put into this 3 class. The pamphlet, which gives an P account of the Experimental Farms experiments to ascertain the feeding valuo of the different © grades of screenings, may be obtained from the | Publications Branch, Department of|« Agriculture, Ottawa. C Roots As a Feed For Horses. I Roots are a valuable feed for horses : under many conditions. For instance, | 1 they are good for horses doing moderâ€" } g ate farm work during the winter. Two t or three turnips or a few carrots‘ £ thrown into the manger when the b horse comes in at night will be greatâ€" ‘ x ly relished. Turnips or carrots are C more accepgable to horses than manâ€" c gels, and they should be given whole. ccording to a new *bulletin of the’g Dominion Department of Agriculture 6 on Growing and Feeding Field Roots, a the merits of roots as a feed for't] horses may be summed up as follows: ‘h They increase palatability, increase si the digestibility of coarse t’ndderss.!,l benefit the teeth and gums, form a]’;! splendid tonic, and cheapen the c | g, tion. I Screenings Classified. Screenings is a byâ€"product of the grain industry and is now available commercially to Canadian stockmen. ’lt consists of brokenâ€" and shrunken grains, weed seeds, including + wild buckwheat and wild oats, chaff, etc., removed from the grain delivered to the terminal elevators and constitutes about 1%4 to 2%per cent. of the total Farm Notes "Though there is now about $9,000,â€" 000,000 worth of gold in the possesâ€" slon of man, it is generally accepted as a fact that the gold that has been taken out of the earth is not worh wha has been spent in its pursult," writes Willlam A. Du Puy, currency expert of the United States Burau of Efcincel, in February "Current Hisâ€" [tory." ‘"‘Many men have spent life times in theh unt for gold and have never found it. _ Innumerable shafts have been run into lonesome mounâ€" tainsides that have never ecounterâ€" e dpay dirt. He who wanders among the solitudes of the Rockies, for exâ€" ample, is quite likely to encounter; the scars on the hillsides left by‘ prospectors who bave worked claims that never produced. The occasional l claim has proved to be a bonanza. The occasional strip of sand has | yielded its yellow dust most profitably for a time. On the whole, however, more has been spent in the quest for gold than was ever realized from it," Necessity apportions impartially to high and low alike.â€"Horace. ; will benefit accordingly. In a new + bulletin of the Dominion Department |of Agriculture on Growing and Feedâ€" : ing Field Roots it is painted out that f since for sheep, roots are mainly useâ€" | ful as a source of succulence, a relaâ€" |tively small quantity is sufficient. Ocâ€" | casionallzâ€" as much as 4 pounds per [ head pef day may be profitably fed but 1% to 2%% pounds of roots are sufficient when feeding, say, 1% to 2 pounds of hay. Mangels are not as safe a feed for sheep as turnips. Carâ€" rots may be used but they are more difficult to grow than turnips. The Cost of Raising Dairy Calves. The cost of raising calvos from birth to one year old or over varies, of course, with the quantity and quality of feed given and the prices paid for the feeds. Nevertheless the record, kept at the Dominion Experi-“ mental Station â€" at Ste. Anne de la} | Pocatiere, of the cost of raising young | cattle should be of interest. The staâ€" | tion has kept accurate records of the lcost of raising a number of dairyl heifers from birth to one year of age! ’and to date of first calving and of buil i calves to one year of age. _ Al the calves were.pure bred of high milk / ’productlon ancestry. They were tedf correctly and plentifully with the alm: of developing them into high class| dairy cattle. As calves they were fed | the necessary quantities of whole and | skim milk and later the rations (-on-‘ sisted of hay, silage, meal and roots,| and the animals were on pasture in | the summer. The average cost of the | feed, including pasture, for a h(-iter; up to one year of age was 30.50, and to date of first calving $68.57. The| average cost of feed for the bull; calves from birth to one year of age | was $39.64.â€"Issued by the Director of | Publicity, Dominion Department of | Agriculture, Ottawa. | Quest for Gold is Expensive PROUD AND CROWS ABOUT iT The prizeâ€"winningBarred Plymouth Reck cock who represented Bermuda at World‘s Poultry Congress. |__ "Crop increases of 500 and 600 per , cent. following the use of a ‘magic :carpot’ of heavy waterproof{ paper ;cow-ring all the ground not actually | occupied by the stems of the plants | themselves, have been obtained by | Dr. L. H. Flint of the United States ]Departmeut of Agriculture," writes | Watson Davis, editor of "Science Serâ€" | vice," in February "Current History." fl "The system is known as paper | mulching, and was first practiced on | tropical pineapple plantations, It | worked there, and the experiments ‘were then made to see whether it (might not be beneficial for various | garden crops in a temperate elimate. !Dr. Flint carried on his l'euearches]1 ltor three years before he was ready \ to report on them. He tried the paâ€" per mulch on a great variety of garâ€"| den crops, and all but one of them | responded with heavily increased | yield, The increases during the 1927 season varled from 11 per cent. with | garden peas to 516 per cent. with‘ spinach. _ The crop of lettuce was‘ more than doubled, that of green cox';x| was trebled, and that of potatoes o,l-; most quadrupled. The paper mulch results in an increase of soil tempâ€"‘ perature, a reduction in the loss oti soil moisture, and a modified distr!â€"‘ bution of water. _ All three of these‘ factors are favorable to plant zrowthf under usual Summer climatic cond{â€"| tions. _A further effect of the blanket ! of paper over all unoccupled soil| spaces is to smother all weed growth." ; :s" Jeff‘s Royalties Won‘t Buy a Breakfast for a Canary. In a test over a waterâ€"worn, potâ€" holed road, a car equipped with these springs traveled 40 miles an hour in comparative ease, As the car passes over ruts or irâ€" regularities in the road, this rubber cushion absorbs the impact from the teeth of the two steel discs. This device has ons steel disc mounted on the frame of the autoâ€" mobile, Another disc familiar to the first is connected to the end of the axle by a heavy steel arm. Both discs are toothed, the teetl> moshing into similar teeth on a soft rubber cushion which fits in between the two discs when they are bolted together. The latest invention of W. Lawson Adams, British engineer, a test of two steel discs enclosing a rubber cushion, it is claimed will make such a trip possible. English Inventor Uses Steel Discs and Cushion to Purpose > Londonâ€"A pleasure trip over the roughest country road, chuck holes at every six feet, miniature mountains and valleys and nary a bounce or jolt, in an auto without springs. Smooth Ride Over Rough Roads Crops Grown From Paper ' Even in the smallest garden it is |well to rotate your vegetables |throughout the patch each year, In _other words, do not grow the tomaâ€" toes this season where they were | planted last year. Of course, it will \be necessary to save the gardon plans from year to year, but this ,’shou}d ba done anyway. It is a good plan to have liguminous crops such as lpeas, and beans, which add fertilizer ‘to the soll, follow such gross feeders l’as corn, and the root crops. In plantâ€" ing vegetables, it is=good business to Iput in a few extra early rows on the | chance that they will escape frost, laud produce a crop two or three weeks ahead of average, but save the ‘bulk of the seed until the time speciâ€". |fied in the seed catalogue. Have a sufficient supply also to replant any rows which may have been ruined by ‘flood or frost or even by some small |though energetic young gardener who may have dug them up by ml_ltake. « If it is not possible to get your sweet poas in in the very near future, it is best to start them indoors in pots or boxes. The word we had not sense to sayâ€" Who knows how gladly it had rung? â€"Edward Rowland Sill, It may take a little longer to use stakes and string in laying out the vegetable garden, but straight rows are not only more pleasing to the eye but also more economical of space than those which jog all over the place. Do not neglect to label each row or clump as planted. Don‘t be afraid to start sowing seed with the snow still on the ground. Grass seed, annual larkspur, popples, and batchelor buttons, or cornflowers will take care of themselves if sown at almost any time now. Too often one sees a garden fade after a few years. Sometimes the roil gives out, or it may be the garâ€" dener‘s enthusizsm, or perhaps the plants become so crowded together that the whole thing reverts to a wild, jumbled state with little or no bloom. | Choice flowers are often crowded out by vigorous growers whose â€"only exâ€" :cuse for existence at all is to act as a limited background to show off their { more richly colored neighbors. A good ‘plan and thorough preparation in the ‘flrst place would probably have preâ€" vented these failures. Whether it “i ‘intended to grow flowers, fruits or | vegetables, the ground should bo{ iplowcd or spaded. In the case of | fower beds it is best to go down a ; couple of feet. Work in plenty of rotâ€" ’ted manure. If the soil is stiff clay lstrawy manure should be used. The top soil should be raked fine and afâ€" Iter the growth starts a little nitrate of soda should be worked in to hasten lthlngs along. Walks may be made ‘with gravel or sod, or ordinary soll | packed hard. If gravel is used, dig ‘out at least six inches of soil before filling in the small stones. Decide where your flower garden is to end, and the vegetables start, and divide with a hedge of tall bushy flowers. Garden Paths. Paths add much to the attractiveâ€" ness of any flower garden or lawn. If ,a supply of limestonc is plentiful and cheap, a pleasing effect may be proâ€" fduced by paving crazy «style or in reâ€"| gular fachion. Siffply dig out sod or ’soll the same sizo and cxact depth of your stone and plant irregularly. If this is done carefully the lawn mower will run right over and no trimming will be necessary. The central path of the garden should be in line with| the centre of the back porch or with |, a window commanding the view if|, the porch is so placed that it is imâ€"|, practicable as an axis. To round off | ; have the path lead up to a roseâ€"coverâ€"| . ed garden seat or archway through | , the flower garden into the vegetable | ; patch. _ If thereâ€" is room, the main path may encircle a garden pool in ; which water plants are growing, or If | j this is too elaborate, a bird bath or | ; sun dial may be used for similar efâ€"}, foct. M Vegetable Rotation Crops VEGETABLES Starting a Garden ‘â€" The whole trovubls came from the :’atiar.:pt to fix the boundary along the \fortyminth parallel of latitude from |the normwest angle of the Lake of ihe Woods ‘m, the Mississippi River, |and hence down tm,,t river. Nothing [ possibly could have*been NOe Simple thad it not been discovered tha. 2** ‘_Or at one end or the other could the, .'qflyah(h parallel be induced to apâ€" proach the northwest arm of the Lake of the Woods or the Missisa@gzt River. The Manitoba bouhdary, now being adjusted, was fixed in the original borâ€" der settlement of 1783. By a queer mistake a little pocket of land on the north shore of the Lake of the Woods was left to the States. Hence arose the saying, which in another month will no longer bo true, that Uncle Sam owned a farm in Canada. How Mistake Was Made. The misteke which gave the liitle pocket to the States presented to Canâ€" ada a huge area that included a large part of the Mississippi Valley. But th States kept the pocket and the Misâ€" siesippi Valloy as well. American dipâ€" lomats quickly discovered the error at ons end of the lins ond the British ~orgstisias*â€"lat it zo with a wore ~* negorn.o., ‘abtit g9 with a the handâ€"it didn‘t matter, it a wilderness. It is a story commonly told that Oregon was lost to Canada because a British admiral found the fishing poor in Oregon and wroto home that the country was good for nothing, and even the salmon would not bite. "By the Ashburton treaty," wrote Lieutenantâ€"Colonel Coffin in a history of boundary disputes in 1874, "we gave up oneâ€"half of the territory in‘dispute, but by the nextâ€"the Oregon treatyâ€" we gave up the whole. In both cases Canada, like an animal doomed to viviâ€" section for the benefit of science, has been operated upon unsparingly for the good of the empire. Diplomatic doctors, in constantly recurring sucâ€" cession, have given her up and given her over. She has been the victim of an endless exhibition of treaties, appliecd allopathically, and then, by force of counterirritants, has boen treated nigh unto death.‘ _ All the other bounary treatios woere recalled, as they are boing recalled again in Canada now that the voxed question has been raised once more. The Ashburton treaty made direct conâ€" nection between Ontario and the mariâ€" times impossible and turned over to the States territory claimed by Canâ€" ada equal to more than the whole area of Massachusetts, The Oregon treaty brought the States north of the fortyâ€" ninth parallel and lost to Canada hunâ€" dreds of square miles on the Pacific Coast. | _As if encouraged by the success in | Manitoba, a resolution has been introâ€" duced in the British Columbia Legisâ€" |lature asking the Dominion to reopen negotiations with Washington for a satisfactory settlement of the Alaska panhandle boundary. Bottled up by the award which gave the entire coast line of northern British Columbia to the States, that part of the coast provâ€" ince and the Yukon feels the time has come to seek an adjustmentâ€"in other words a seaportâ€"which, the resoluâ€" tion claims, would be to the mutual advantage of the Dominion and the United States. _ Some supporters in British Columbia are even willing to offer a little cash to make Uncle Sam feel better about parting with proâ€" perty which all Canada has long feit was wrongly awarded. Alaska Award Irksome. Of all the boundary awards the Alaska one was the sorest of the Doâ€" minion. Many more square miles of territory to which Canada had a claim was given to the States in ear lier treaties. The Alaskan settlement was the most recent and perhaps the most glaring example of Canada beâ€" ing sacrified on the altar of Angloâ€" American friendship. ‘The feeling in 1903 was not aimed against the States but against Britain. The action of the British Chief Justice, Lord Alverstone, whose swing to the United States‘ side after telling the Canadian memâ€" bers that he would vote the other way, gave to the United States all that they asked, was the target of a storm of protest, vigorous, widespread and susâ€" tained beyond anything in the counâ€" try‘s annals. For the first time in Canada there was serious talk of sopâ€" aration; independence was hailod 2o« less dangerous than impcorial coune« tion. Within a month Canada will have increased its territory By two and a half acres at the expense of the United States. In a long series of boundary negotiations, ever since 1783, Canada has lost territory every time a treaty was signed with the States until the present one which adâ€" justs a centuryâ€"old surseyor‘s error. Manitoba gains something more thar 1,000 square yards, and a bill to exâ€" tend its borders is now before the Legislature. The United States has handed over the territory of its own free will and without price., Success of Domicion in Getâ€" ting Lake of Woods Acreâ€" age Brings Demand for Manitoba Award Outlet to Sea Is Sought Canada Called Victim "as ust Afghan Ruler Invites Itali Move Recalls Disaster 0 Generous Terms Of Rome.â€"The visit of King lsh to Italy may result in & wive emigration to his king« ghanistan, not of laborers or #urists, but of electireal e Rome.â€"The visit of King 4 lah to Italy may reeult in as wive emigration to his kingd ::un. not of laborers or , but of electireal en €octors and professore ‘This will be the second tit wuch an expedition has been q Â¥he first experiment was tr wears azgo, when at the sugge Â¥he same king a group of ff whs, engineers, architects, doot murses was sent to Kah the of Afghanistan It ended rat the offer seer King Amanull the expenses members of 1 was to civiliz #ry. Many y were attracte« make their na through membe: ghan w attackir death ! sent by was paid wn gover Kabul _ mission with the who wer of the ki Paris.â€""Who started _“I‘ to be settled, at 1; Isfaction of France, an éozen of France‘s mos: Gents, historians and st been appointed by th to dig u» all necessary C to give the world the Â¥uth about how it sll ) cou i Italy ‘The white leat #o conspicuously *m of the H« listed at $72 m ; BStarting with the eaps worn by the bat Engineers and the 3 §$35 each, while the » mets of the Househ: §45. It is estimated : of metal ribbon is an: by the crack regimen! be obtained from th« mt 83 cents a yard, » eents above the usua The silk for battalio: mt $15 a yard. The State . hold Cavalry mers of the F« which cost $: specively, . T wet weathor | @lry are listod «0 the State cl Btate o« tray mers in Wardrob of the Serge: Footguards ar« Bome idea of wl member of a crac may be gathored of the Army CloiU lico, just isued by recru first â€" upon to At prc talians > Germans fessions bound to the laws and the The King in a native c turns out on of an inferic ers seldom } foreigners is receives any The knowir the newcomer King leans fo lapel of the : course, . encei new suit, and is a suit of n: which he hol while he talk Afghanistan gineors, and d Afghan gentler Persian, owing for higher e noblemen and beyond the r writing and a1 insists on a a French Hunt Truth of pedition 2 Years A‘ When Engineer was Executed â€" for Love Affair ‘ The an British Uniforms n The D t7