Whitby Gazette and Chronicle (1912), 3 Aug 1916, p. 2

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N - 4 t NO0TES ANI)COMZnENTS ub0 b» W'ho fsenan ÉEngh news- ie F OPpaun ai fe-to b. lmpreae wlth i HF S 00gm u ngyof the Englimh li PAUtesnot their owiL They havé Fashion has at last mana.ged to thofr Ïhare 01 uffering from the war combine comfort. with grace aii t* bears wounded and crippi.ed soldiers charm. The @ports costume predom- !'eturnlng home, familles in straits nt;vrosstlso id n because the. breadwinner in away, in- Ruauian blouses are worn wvth trim comoq reduced by heavy taxes. lThe fltting skirta; chic suits o! striped and deinsid on their resourees and on their plain mohair, ponge. or linon, wlth sympathies le very great. Yet they Norfolk coats and pleated' sktrts, are ane working zealously, for the vic- favored; and sweater coets, with sel£ time of Germa.n ambition i other or contrasting skirta, also popular. lands. They are raisinfl uIiI.5and The mlddy blouse costumes are de- givWlg personal service for their al- veloped in tihe regulation white linen, lie almost ais if they were atb peace. duck or galatea, with collar and cul!. The Refugee Children in Russla, the of blue ara- skirts cf the new atriped Serbrian Irisioners, the Belgian Red cotton inoveltim,,, mohair or plain white Cross , France's Wounded Soldiers, linen. The modified Russian and Montenegro, Pouash Relief-these are "slip-on" blouses faî'ored the white ainong the causes for whlch money is and colored Japanese silks, pongee, belng asked and' freely given. Thus plain or flg'ured, Shanbing, or, Geor- supplies have been sent to 1199 miii- gette, and are uiqually combined with tar-y hospitalsiq n France since t'he be- skirts o! t'hin, light or dark silks. ginuing of the yenr. Some six hun- on, espectally prett'y costume dred pounds wetît to Montenegro deveîoped in plain natural colored alone in a little overa month.' Mach poge Ime n obndwt larg'er sums have gone to Belg um sirt of <ark Mlue foulard dotted with Poland and Serbia. bright green, is illustrated here. It is a slip-on moxiel wit cool., becom- Ail classes aire taking part' in this9 ing sPleeves, and an effective coller. noble outpuuring of charitv. The1 The skirt' iq a simple gathered design, subecriptions run from aî shilling tb a short andl full, but unusually race- thousand pounds. Peerm, bishops. fin- fui. ancieds, aIl join to help. In every The plain white Russian blouse coa- part of the 1niîl thp wormen, with turne of (ccorgette crepe is particular- characteriaqtic devotîn, tire lati<riî.ýi ly effective and cool for these hot nlght and day, reizardiess of thpir gummer dnys, ani perfectly appropri- social pleastures, their personal rom- aN- for glinmer e%nifig Wear. The forts. Hiere im human nature ai its best. War is terrible; yet it may 1fr man above the level tif the bieast. asa Weil as plutoge hlm belaow it. Each nation engaged in the conflict is being tested in its own way. What we see in Enicland Pepecailly la the breaking down of the harriers of clams and creed a.nd race, the quickening of symnpat'hies as broad as humanity it- self, the spirit. of abnegation, of sacri- fice, oi endurance. A common hope. , a common sorrow, have tbound men together as they liav-e never been bound before. There is somne soul o! go»lýnesa in things evil, after ahi. Another story of gallantry anîd chiivalry comes f rom tihe front. Ovil- lers is one of the pointa on the Ger- man Une of great strategic import- ance, and it lias been desperately de- fetided by the German troops. When i was finally taken b)y the Biritish there Mas appalling evidence of the character of the defense. Oat (o! six thousand men (>nly one hundred and twenty-six were left. ('orpses were everywhere, and many of those left alive were lit-'le better than (iead. Yet the remaiier fought on with a valor which admiration cannot exag- gerate. Perhapa al would have fal- len but for the wounded British t;ub- alt,+ern who led a charge which fore- ed themn to surrender. Nor did the vanquished lack due tribute from the victora. As the prisonerB were dis- Mîiddy Blouse and Serge Sklrt patched to the rear the British formed in line and' presented arma in honor simple voiles, ioo, are being develop- of their courdge. It was a fine ed in charming models with a tourh of This passage as enougis te disprove the conception o!finere abracadabra which some scisolara have found in the "tengues" o! this epistle. The mneaning ia identical with thati o! the Pentecoat stery. The after-thought and o! angels merely iseightens tise note o! scorn, and need flot be pro- saically interpi'eted. Else we might Bay that the "«angeis" or "princes' o! o! the nations in Daniel miglit be sup- posed te apeak tise languages o! tuheir peoples, as well as the one language o! the heavenly world. Cymbai- Specialiy used la the orgiastic wor- slip o! Cybele, characteristic o! Asia Minor. 2. Mysteries-There is more than a haif reference to tihe ahain mysteries the people o! "Knowledge" M-ere al- ways professing te have fathorned, to tise scora o! plain folks wbo could net see below thse surface o! a atone wail Knowledge, or ratîter insighit (iinosis, whence came tuhe later name gnostic), wuastOe special boust o! these clever people, to wisor Paul at tributed "the falsely named know- ledge" (l Tim. 6. 20). Ia ita full developmcnt iti anawers exactly te thse always foolish and o!ten foui stuif now called theosopliy. But Paul's ivords wouid aVilI b. true if thse "rny- steries" and "insight" were bru. and divine; even the deepest tlieology is futile without love. "The heart makemi the theoJogian." Remove -.nta-T.., p n 0.raste af ise act and the moa3t h.ardened paciflat hlack, or a bright color at girdle or auget at 7 0 u tmybv must read o! iti with a thrili. Sud t h rc)t. The new voiles are wash- been proverbial. 'hie question might are Pe human touches even in the ahie in most mixtures, and generaliy be asked how such faithis l possible dreafui carnage which Mar hnings. satisfactory. in a lovelesa flan-a question often They sauid lie remembered to the Cool Frocks for Street Wear recurring in these verses. Paul does vredit c! hiiman nature. Dr lei aftGogte o a ti:h sol sltn hs Dark---e n-<--et- Georette sno or5t coit a: ieis onyioaigtss VII.-11 .- 1 -----. -- serIre and satin is the leadrinu' enor gae o opnsn HOL)IN OU NO EAY. for street wear, ln spite o! its appar- 8. Ail miy goods-The ricis young Eiirent warrnt'li. As most o! tise frocks' ruier was toid that for doing this he Cermaai 'aper Say@ That it là a' hwvr r avwiwieo ef would have treasure in heaven. A Said Than Done..ooe transparent sieeves, they are good illustration o! the danger o! Tise Deutmche Tageszettsng i la - in reality quite as cool as a liglit col- pr aî literaînegginl interpretation! dignant with those patrits who are'ored frock. Dark blue Geergette ins To b. burned-Th, marginal reading, perpetually decia ring that the nation o!t'-n used for the entire di'etts coîîar-te 1 goy ifrigoi n Must"hoi ot,,"andwho as heysayed and rufl ed with taff eta, and trim- single ietter, la rather better attested. mthsar "hitnd ho, sth cy aof sy dmed with a bardi or two o! Oie taffeta But the point seemae rather to demand food and washing it down wi t en 'on the akirt. A dark blue serge and a heightening o! the sacrifice than a giasea o! Wood beer. Tihese peo- Georget'te f rock lias aWa odd, applique 54ornful bellttling of it. Both read- pie ar'e constantiy reÎ'eîring to the design la Hlue velvet trimming the ingsarme well iilustriated by the fani- "heroic fild greys" in the t"1chjjumper, whieh la o! the serge; lb. de-0.15 5tO17 Cf! lb. philosopher wiso are "holding out," but it is ex- isiga, whicb ta a amaîl leai, in re- A ". . . Who te b. deemed trem.ely uniikely "ist tho'y bave nny peated on th, collar and cuirs. Sashes. Agood leaped foadly into Etnaflarnes, notion wisat "holding out" i#ias. which are a feeture o! botis linenansd EmPedocleL" Bub It mnust bc made t!la:ý to tuiese serge frocks t'Sis summer, o! ten à 4. Suffer.l long-Or is patient, as Persns nd o ai otersp.eaaîng opportaity for introduciag a readered lan James 6. 7. Ia Klnd- poi#resaa eaIl oetthra opcrase. bitof colored embroidery. '[The saab The word la me often umid e! Qed, thôa' tu r ealmasn cftâthida pitade.ntise serre frockin tagenerally o! Who la sLove'" Puffid up-A faver- thoute.p, ers PGonar e uni)rsluî a- te word of Paul Compare 1 Cor. 8. th t g a, m e t p .a ' es ir '> l n g 1, w h ch w e uig is: co llo q u ilaly ren d er, er tuer. ta b. Stmply devotared, but "nib"Cv "e ed ti ta Mia.tala 1f., and when thi. air re- Jglj4gvs.eldhaIta @O"Mwit endoim-%Yinin abulblove that builds up.' ShOrtae sac!d scarcity. nit eniy those 5 n«l-ehp h edn Wiio are st,11îl feediag opulently, but thse thougltit lao! the pitiful exhibition Still grtater nwnber ss'isoare tigîstien.. g s»tvee otn aes Love in4 thoir belta must learra that In ee os alt hnhetot tirýquerulou e cmplmalffl b.y are ft th liowest s.rvloe-iiow supremely ttUplSYing thi. Most sateful form o! rugal wa J»susw-sabls the tolt of ,Unta'lrotic conduet. the twelvel11TMeadjectvu aeawer- "the. wnter adds: "[n the finit place in as opposite te l*. word er. te 'iy Mnuât methat, our troops are sup- tt m a ,s n rts 17. 12.for voksde pilai. Tiist mn là a bd Gorman T> tm,.(la isn ttg 1oua12la romri Whoe w-uit n enounce abondance for j "sarp cntnI"oign" lArts .-6U--Sor *.r sc.At tiie beglnnrgof th@ Tet la once aiil la wArte 5.a ot pluc- ai w uaythouglt -they eould 'hold et I ' i,oeisP a au isf&ant Tam «It wlti a pittane, but it anmt j " oeo.a-A a mmiea enlb ont lOd. "ýt s' . - tomL*e'el.dgnbssno d"bltaide. o 'Ja 'to «dadsn..'* AttenUogloiei. I 82 of.hl î » la êa4wu t. esîaay eojiIa'luwhuuat ene LI f094. la 4130 usure and duar, but ln e.guat.i by thMo (Matin)5V5la fusai. couta'lu %Okdung eut" 'suasb mâ ddaato to be butter udirutood nd Mor.e pt-_ tlve"ir multâtude ot sMWs JI5Oidtian laGonmany. <t Pst. 4. S). -wb.r., hovve!r. thei wb nr inue Out, *d a- lab4W*tw* k ring osmuig, amd lie kflSgie wa kI*a to bw*te lC«r. 02.. ktoef 44* V e t k bhavea r t tb.u MWMp.r*rl a be r 1 Buiyour kuatr, uW mSlPm@us. b te t.eSqo l *g looliab i - m & b« îâà»-et-th bu l» ras by u*b. asb am e.0ê'-~ * Vs$ty 040dsy- su, IL à k e th * 1 , t- la JrIti. u.. 5* . m a#.-, t malftWho flued the. "Millmnftis Dawn" for 19151 9 .W. know-.More exactiy, we. learh or eome te kuow. Phophesy-'. Bet forth Qed'. message, whlch in nature of thingsw. can only partialy realite. ilence the. progressive. character o! Old -Testament prophecy. Il. Put aw4y-The same word as dona away. 12. In a mirror-Ancient mîrrors were of metaI, and to ldentify objecta ,must otten have dean 1k. a rlddle (margin). Paula figure remlnds us o! Plato's famous allegory o!f the cave- mo#n confined la a cave «Ivth thoir ~AR 0ECRAWFORD 15 A DEMOCRAT NEW MEMBER 0F THIE COALI- TION CABINET IN BRITAIN. In Army Medical Corps; When Waz' Broke Out, and Rose to Rank of Corporal. ?ar»~i.uaryspeaer b lebriglit fb«frCWed hep 8sun. f"ansioxignsibd. iW"i i be sa no 3.-ZAt blasy freié Voet" tab e ftUmiO5 t douum le b!. pu. klngdem Bat mau" freqeestly sa aft*il et Sesjd ciimms"u- M Isas la qusnt4t. tagethors b. la one etth.iao ho-ri t cidsiuikai h"eda»',. tàO IXo! it ecusaib. MW*d. mii Avold lS. wmamsd . Iyeul t<*«Aet efflzs gii uaP m liii. tMatoh uas..tb -but part or U1rIag DO Mnt su. .ap .eppaumée Lbluip. qmgt3sRob W .body -brisitty lb.Uusdman MWs. gstbaps 4.Spet4uur tifw WIf lutvbum1 linb. li5tP4.p£ a inde.,, do e up1atw oii. asiecaul tSU 40ilttU draft~ ~ ~ b brueswn.,h uA.ses a.wu» be ~*a te 1w - ', 1 lébr> es Woft'chow. aud the, chair-mae bats are ail favored, ilnlab.dwlth Juat a .-tçuch of colorod 'wool, beads, or a bW'tht bit oe ýappl1que enubroidery whlcb harmonîzes wlth suit or frock. On. of the uenartst bats 1. a dark tan tan Wen-Chow with on. of the new quartered crowns ia dark purple siatin, trimmol Iwith a motif in deîft .blue and white Chines. embroidsry. 1A purpia satin hand-bsg with anothor k bue and white motif completes the 1effeet, wlich ia charming. This bat Land bag are wos'n with a diaty littIe )corded !rock of tan crepe de Chine, made wlth a petticoat of creain batiste embroldery whlch shows just a bit b.- low the ilken aktrt- Theae patterna miay be obtained !rom your local MeCali dealer or from 1The McCall Comipany, 70 Bonud t-., Torontv, Ont. Dept, W. THEf SUNDAY LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON. AUCUST 6. Le&son VI.-The Greatent Thing in The W'orld; i Cor. 13. Golden Text,-l Cor. 13. 13. Chapter - 12. Verse 3 1.-This last clause belonga properly to the new chapter, îvhich it introduces. The way takes us to Him who said, "I am the way," whose name may be set in eacli of the jeweled places where love ia named. Chapter 13. Verse 1. Tongues- baeka te the entrance, andi knowing1 The inclusion of the Eari of Craw- teexternal world only through theo ford ln the Britishi Cabinet as succes- ahadowa caat on the Ianer wall. Even soi' to Lord Selborne, as Preaident o! so men try to rend the 11RIddle of tho the Board o! Agriculture, is an ap- Universe," andi fail the more egregi- pointment that la certain to b. popu- ously aa they show more confidence ln lar with mnembars of ail parties. It their powers. She-1l I know fully- will be very popular wltli membera of The Greek verb is a compound, aâ the Flouse o! Commons, ln which against the simple forrn in I know cliamber the earl sat for fifteen suc- (learn, comae to knowjla part. But cessive years as member for the Clior- the renderlng "know fuUly" la now dis- ley division o! Lancashire, prior to provad; the compound verb deals with hie accession to tlie peerage on liea paicular kiowledge, the simple with father's death three years ago. For knowledge in general. Iiù was kaown Lord Balcarres <pronounced "Bal- -By God. carrez" with the accent on the second 13. Abldeth-It la a great nilstake syllabie) as he waa in hie House o! to suggest that faitli and hope are îess Commons days, was immensely popu- than love because tbey have no place lar peraonaîîy with political friends ln heaven. The real distinction in and opponients alike. [n fact, it used that they belong to thle creature, while te be said of hlm that he was one o! love belongs aise tote creator. The the four mogt popular men la the greatest-It le perhaps not superflu- House, the other three being Sir oua to i'emitv- the atudent of Henry George Younger, Unionist'Member for Drumrnond's superb littie booc The Ayr; Mr. Ure, then Lord Advocate Greateat Thing il' the World. Few for Scotland in Mr'. Asquith's Govern- Christian thinkers have been more ment, and Sir Edward Carson. Whlch fitted te comment on Pauls8 mastner- goes to show that the House o! Coin- piece. mons la pretty catliolic in its tastes as regards ita favorites. For some years the then Lord Bai- icarres was a junior Lord o! the Treasury and one o! the Unlonist whlps. In fact, bis tact and genial- HEA TH ity had not a little to do with keeping Mi'. Balfour's Government, in the days when it was tottering te ita faîl, Treatment of Apoplexy. in office. Wben the war broke out Apoplectîc strokes are o! various the Earl, wbo is forty-five years old, degrees. o! severity. Some attacks went to the front as an ambulance are so severe that death la almoat ln- bearer, eniisting as a private and sub- steantaneous; others are s0 sligbt that aequently attaining the rank o! "Cor- after a few montha' ca.re and appro- poral Crawford." priate treatment the sufferer is able The Tory Democrat. to resumne almost ail hia wonted ac-, David Alexander Edward Lindsay la tivibies. The wiseat treatment is the his full name, but he is known to hia preventive. Certain constituttonal friends( and their number is legion) changea are precursors o! a stroke, as "Hal." Tbough a Tory in politica,1 and as soon as these are recognized he 18 extremely 4emocratic in tern- it is wise to change the mode of 1iSe perament. H. Is an athiete, a fine abt once. boxer, a teetotalier, and possessed o! The public is no longer uninati'uct- a fund o! bumor which neyer degener- ed about the dangers of higb bloold ntes into hitternes. He owns about pressure, and it is a simple matter to fifteen thousand acres, and a couple o! asces-tain the exact degree o! that fine country seats, Haigh Hall, Wigan, pressure. People who have bigh blood tension and weakenied vascular iwalls (and these' two conditions of - ten go together) live in daily langer of a cerebnai hemorrh.age. SuchI fpeople shcald moderate tiheir activ- ities, both in work and la play, until their lives cen b. properiy described as& quiet.' It la well to take geatie outdoor exercise, but' tbey muet avoid fatigue. The ga.me pqg9i! is a vai'it- able godsend to thousanda o! sucb per- sons. Their meals sliould be regular < and lîght, arnd they should eat lit- tle or no meat; alcohol and t'obacco sboul be forbidden, or very sti'ictly limited. Many o! those who live in danger o! apoplexy are in middle life, o! set- tied and even obstinate habits, and inciined to be more or leas seif -indul- gent. Others, who are in the midat o! iife's battle, cannot, or think they cannot, abandon any o! their ttiv- ities. But intelligent persoas ea generally see a peint, if it la driven home, and seifisb persons cen always b. fightened. A good plain talk Earl of Crawford. from ain honest physicien in invaluable______________ in these early stages.an aare osinfehrfr After the. ettack lias occurreci, tiese divairsioouhihseo ieh c, or patient sbout 1 be handled with tie ut- on' iiin0!wihSotihcut mont care and gentilenets. He should M r. Asquith s l member. b. piaced lying down, but wlth hie The Lindsays, o! whlch family h. hea an ahuldrs ligtlyraiedinthe. bead, are kaown in Scotland bea an shulers sllhty taîsdan "the Ligbt Lindsays" becaus. of a.nd bis coliar or any tigbt clnthing, the sandy hýir which usually preveils shouid be looaened or cut awey. 1la their famlIy, though, as it happens, Sometimes, hi. tongue faits baek into 1 hepresent Esrl's a h a dntmrkle-In t t1ve-as Lte eectric metnod. A tr'ougfl is excavated along a rat-run adjoin- IJng tise trenches, and over tisis are placed three wîres runnlng paraiel te eacis other. A constant supply o! cur- rent ins maintained in the wires, which are spaced only a !aw laches apart. The rats, In crossing the trough, corne ia contact with tise wiras, resulting in mmmediate daatb. It la reported that isundreds o! rats are kilted eacis week by this method. Elephata Nt Cowarda. The fear an elaphant lias for a rat- lias oftea ýb.en spoken o! as an ex- ample o! colossal cowardice. But it la notbing o! the. kind. The elephant, when captive and in chalas, bas evei'y reason to regard witia terror the iittle rodent, wich, in the stiîf watches <cf lb. alght, gnaws the tiu&- nais o! tisa isepleas pacbyderm. Nt much of tht. sort o! thing is required te make tise huge creature lame. -Provlag tie Preverb. «I Distanie lends encliantuneat te, the view', *me poot says."" "iTbat's righl At any rate it's- easier te admire a girl when sise's '.essors in tefl earlaom tOOk the same vlew, and a couple o! hundred years later, the dukedoin o! Montrose was corferred upon the bouse o! Graham,! another ancient Scottisis houa., Who' heîd it to-day. However, we live in other. daya. The. Earl o! Crawford la the fi!teenth century would accept ne title frorn his king. The Earl o! Crawford o! to-day has wooed the suffrages o! the electors, and very success!uily, too, for he carne triurnpbantîy througli sevea ciections ln ha House o! Ceai- mons days. And as member o! the present Cabinet is more simple aad unaffectçd, and leas "stuck on hlm- self" than h. la. Re Ka.w. "Now," said th. professer o! chem- istry, "under whst combinattion is goid most quickly relaased7" Tise stuclent pondered a momenbs «I kaow sir," h. anawered. "Mar- rnag,." Seon.satintfacton. Mise Green-Of course you csn't belleve evea'yting you hear. Miss Gidleigh-Oh no; but you cas t if - 8 - f--- --i The Blue Birds and the Boy Net Jut then the boy, who had ba.fl Doo. peepig over thie fence, gave a loudi "We are almost there, my dear!1" whoop. Mr. Bluebird fcrgot even twittered Mr. Bluebird one glorious to appear brave, and together he and pring morning. They were wng- hia litte wife flew to a near-by tre, ng their way back from the. wam They saw the boy run into the house 8Suthlanir4 for the apring had core. next door, but they could nt under- dIp M 8 glad!îr chattered hie lit1>1. Stand What he Said. I will tel >,<. 'eife. "And 1 do hope the apa.rrows "Mother! Motherl" he called. "The havent got into our house. Do you bluebirds have corne back to their remnember what a time we had get- houa. next door. and Mrs. Morris Is ting t'hem out last year?" away, and she left a large clotb.espin "I certainly do."9 answered Mr. ln the doorway to keep the sparrYWs Bluebird. "It took almoet two days' out, and now the bluebirds can't get fightlng, and then the lady in the big in. I'm afraid they will go some- bouse had to help drive themn away. where else before she gets back." Sauc thîga!'The boy's mother came to the door "IWonder If that awful boy still aný1 looked over at the bluebird housê lives next (loor? How he used to " hn r.Mri ol ega frghten m e!" M rs. Bluebird tw itter- I hink r takeo rihe c lth epîn eut ed af er a w hile. i s o u ir t a n e t the co thesi home." M r. B lueb rd said nothing. T he boy sah ersai d " hey e back t e ar i e r" next door had frightened him, toc, sI t s in "eyec e hem, a ri but ha did not like to -say so before Morrshwill nte ere oadweek is timid litte wife. Morrisw. Get the sepaer, fonny."e T h e n x t . mn o r n in or th e y a u g h t ig h t ra. Ga n d t Me . Bl a e r , w a hng Of the lîttIe town where they lied liv- r.adM.Buidwthn ed before, and in a litte while they anxiously from the near-by elm tree, had flutereld dw-n into the yard of saw the boy core out with a step- thelr homne. But there a great dis' ladder, clinib over the fence and ddra< appointment awalted them the ladder over aftet him. Then "Oh, what shahl we do?' cried Mrs. th.ey saw hlm carry it over to the Bluebird. "I'm afraid we'Il have to pole on which the bird house stood, flnd a new nest, and inmse tired!" climb the ladder and take out thé. "I can't understand it," said Mr. clothespin. Af ter that he went back Bluebird, as he hopperi about the lit- to bis own yard., tle bluebird houa.. The sparrows "I thik if we hurry we can get had not corne to 1ive in their bouse. there before the sparrows," twittered Somnetbing worso had happened. Right, Mr. Bluebird S'harply. "HurTTy, My in the doorway, and stuck very flrrnly, dear." was a clothespin. They could flot They fluttertil over to their littie get into the bouse, bouse. Ta make matters worse, a group Of "How good it is to back again!" saucY sparrows hopped about and chattered Mrs. Bluebird. "And what jeered and laughed at themn. a klnd boy! Ha ca.nt b. so bad, after "I Wonder where the lady in the'al"- big house is?", said Mi-s. Bluehird "No, you will not nead to be afraid sadly. "She waa always gis dto see of him any more," said Mr. Bluebird; us, O dear, therels that aw!u.4 boy!1 and lie was glad that lie should flot Let's go rig-ht away froin ber. and have te be afraid of hilm. eitlier.- get a lest somewhere else."1 Youth's Companlon. iehi'h the famnily held itself, and was RATS [N TRENCHES. held by others, may be gathered! froin the fact that when King Jame.3 Killed by EiectricitY-How French IV o! Scotland, in 1488, created the CenRdnaOt Eari of Crawford of that day, wlo CenRd sot was Lord High Admirai and Lord Numerous have been the methods Justiciary of Scotland, Duke of Mont- ernployed by the. soldiers in the rose, the earl didn't assume the titîe. French trenches te kill the rats which Ha thought his dignity o! such a de- constitute a veritable plagua in the gree that it was not in the Power of western war zone; but *perliaps none any mnonarch to enhance it. Hs b-ýas been so lnteresting-and so effêc- TEXT -TOR MODERN PEOPLE "Get Tliee a Teacher," le the Seer's Advlce to the Young and Akw-to the. OId. TG.t thi..asteacher" waa a favoritâ self-made ma.n eften ln, as it lias been maxim of an "«let Palestinian sald, that ho titor« s inmkar. lie- taciie. abbi .0m, the. son o o!.mctlmn *vota ta. WIuth t is 0own Parbliis eotmpoary o< th .povers and ftall ta gilve the. proper, n.it 1$ a repetta t - peoPi la O&'Itodnmost. splênd aê foqas W i.ndm ntitv..wss sd q4"k onacifuc wfodmsaiwha"e dtegrd wmto slwn 6U<;O wuè, ttehzoe" t a lth iwns.1vet. vWbsueus wWitiith ai eUdboodsud ~.ut areti eotti ~thioi tte ~àof tii s< dI~ &s atudis advlee hbat adimscr*la tlw. md, esan CIdb.tkit .4tI.I.b~ Uprootftim Tb* imii eta .in <mw » " -~~ bad a -uood as hiè Smpara_ dutIOS la IDtiF @o 4ii but wii<>are qpi W- &mat- iii. biwmrïnbU*e ln. b- W w am ka"OW I e ln<toa ttiêPreoo of busil et d~c smah la hh~4 a- s Wttkti. u tbed~elu

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