HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-01-16, Page 7ttla
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Sunday School
Lesson
'tlantrary 19. Lessen Ill -Jesus Begird)
His Ministry -Matthew 4: 17-25.
Golden Text -Repent: for the king-
dom of heaven Is at hand. -Mat
thew 4: 17.
. ; ANALYSIS.
. ,
h 1. THE, GALL OF •THE FIRST eiSeletzt
17-22.
a IL : THE BEGINNING 00 fliE MISSION,
23-25.
.„
'INTR0DUCTION,44 order to: follow
• ' the' movements of Jesus after the
• temptation, we ,iniettturn to the first
eliapter of Jahn. Ettideett he did not
.
return at anceArgo Galilee, :eed when
lie did -cone haelh he •did not •go to
Nazareth, but Went to Colman:tem, on
' the neighside of the Lake of ,ottlihee;
which now begeniess'hie headquettees:
, I. THE 'C.A111. OF THE FIRsT DISCIPLE,'
V. 17. This cal: of the disciples hs
. .
a matter of great significance. ',fhere
are four amounts of this zall in the
gospels, and all agree in ehowing that
this was one ig the fiest things ' to
which Jesus gave this' attentison The
evidence for this discipleship is very
lull. He felt tin, need of havingthelp-.
ars, who Weald corn' to; know•him pert
Sohaity, who coUld leern of the true
learner's. Preaching Was Mere forinal,
and .appealed more to the mind aed
emotions of the hearers. .
The subject hg'the,preacher is given
here as "the mope!, or geed news, of
the kiln -game; and this intrechiees one
Of the coalition words of the New
Testarnent. The term,. "Itingdom''of
heaven:' r 4111,? kingdom of God,"
pecues.very• frequently in the four gos-
pels,. though it is found very seldoin
in the rest of the New Testament. It
.eocurs in the . Old Testament, and
means, the sovreeeignty• ot rule of God:
Jesus takes a teern that was Irhown to
the people of his time, and ghadually
reads new Ines -Ming „
• V. 24, Wes..no .wonder' that the
farne of. this ,Preachee spread. quigklY
through the' lend, eetieetally ;ellen .we
think of these nterveleus ewes twhich
he • wirotsght . the side" We sheald
notice in this vereh the •gteat' variety
of • his Miracles, and regegnie :the fact
that the healing 6f the tiek th.4 a
dtetinctivie hart of the therk Of Jeeps'.
In this the churchha e tried to fallow
his example,:inthehountligg
tale,' and in all the efforts tit care for
the necessities of the body;
V. 25. This verse„showe. the eetent
of his hnission, inclecling, . not only
Gal,ilee, but .the leeds that, lay both
smith 'and east: ;• e 6
"nature of. his te,aching, and to whom
' he could •entrhst the future of his
' kingdom. It is only h• the ,case of
'great. men Abet we• find disciples.
, Ordinary people do net have followers.
Jesus p,ave a great deal•of his time to
the training of the .band f intimate
.folloWetse He tog& them With hiin
whoreter he went, and . acted like a
•
A Freneh. Vie* . .
,
, -.- • of' Stresemann
. '..• _We•mustenot fell to. grase ,the pitte-
ciples ang sentiments that ,cleterinin•
-
•,ed Herr Stresemanigie adopting the:
' attitude he assurned in leading Gee -
many, along the path she lies. follOvteh
•for the past five years. ST.he chief
dipleritat intermarty: hsad nothing Of
the: mystic about h.ime On the cont
earn; he. was .4 eemplete realist in
the full meanhig of the word end et-.
teacher to .them. The four here Men- anted tart:tag only t tie immedtate•
toned belonged to the O:dinary , folk. slhilitke. . Being Genhan in heeet
.
They were fishermen, who epoe.
arned their. tatnitreal.h-Ste • thousand Eskimos quagli . al cainhaigh foe the. -return of
,lihing •with Physical, HI, They were !ninth. andsoul., 1.. ' ' ' •
a h d no ° th a eg 'tieing,. eheerfuily tit, Anetie and' eulh Prince 'Catol., father Of the boy ,king,
resourceful and cOurageoese and the thought' than Genrien interests.' In Arctic Canada; ere• '•hiteate,ned with Michael. ' • ' ' • • ' .
,
result justified. the •choteet Of Jesusspite.ef certain general formulas that
- ultiniate entinetion. b. y the spread' sof • 'llnder peders•from -the...Minister Of
. We me' be astonished that he ,did not he lovse.d to rep"eat, his actions lacked '
tall men of more intleenegt, 'ho had
• se
•
no Cm.emony the. Boya tujoYcd
, ;AN OCCASION FC;1146*R:JOICING.ife THE RHINELAND TOWNS .AND CITIES . .
t thhata. , e. , • ... er
::.?.....i 0.0. ......
a ' Joy and. wild ahenclon 'were the rule in tgliteelandtewns as . the ttroops of the Oleg Ahmy - of Occupation
evacuated the second' zone in accerdenee witle'rehhratiena ageeem.ent. 'The Width teepee , egg' iteewa leavin•
. .,
Weishacien as. the Preneh, troops (left). entet., • . , ,, ' • s• •
. •
••••
prastic*tioi •
Needed Save
Canackan Oyster
If somethiag drastta liot done
about the •Caeadlan Oyster fishery it
wil peon' cease to. be of any ihipotte
anee;' said, .J. Paulhue, former ,pre-
• sidept of the genethen;lhisheries' As-
sociatiee, and. one. of ;the, leading
• ithol,esale Astienerchanta of Montreal.,
when asked.What•he eoneihered te he.
the _Major: ,prohleme of the ftsheties
'of easier p •Caesside.; ,
"Canada's oyster'. predeption is
haidly . ,
one-feurth what, it Wag ,years.
ago,. and: the. quality di Canahiaat oys-
ter e we get in this 'methet,. grows less,:
tatlefeetety," Me. Paullihk added, "Of
-
Ohre, it has been said before, 'even.
hefere' the wart that the rip.q.u.§trk.wa§,f
de•CAning and threatened, with huin.
Some 'effotts have been inede•stetsate
It by,: replantieg some, beds ehh
torelpg eloser restrietient on
but these .have .hot. been seccesifut.
The pro.duetthe grow's. tete, ;and Atm
g product seept" to this market in. the
• last few years have n'ot helped the
reeetation of the Canadian oyster.
Ills of Whites
Carolist Campaign To Keep the Boys
Quickly Quashed Flogie on the Farm
Only the superior reputation of the
Caeadiart oyster t ieherithd from the:
past has kept it on the market at all.
Calted • Menace And the .producers appagently don't
To All Eskimo's
Rumania Goverinnent Uses Ontario dives Farmers Cheap
Pcower to End Drift
Ultimath Extinction Feared as
Civi• li•zation Brings New
Force In Stop issue kpf.
" Newspaper -
. .
Bucharest Rumania -The Goveent•
ment used • force ' 'Sunday night to:
to Cities
. Disease to Natives Ttemitchtegleetrielty ie heing•put to
0 . , . • work on tee farme of Ohterie. ' To
supply farmers onlg, 1457' Milea 'of
transmishion ,i'itte.e Were 'built .thiting
the laat yeah by the •, °Merle Hydro
Cemniission :e.t.a cosh Of $2,650,000,,
• This year the' expansion Protgram.
with( rities on the Pee North predict,. •seal's' for ,00s0 miles.- • .
that geneyous enthusiasm for. a glee
'Idee thaholiaraeterizes: the efforts of,;.,
, Diego:se aid • death, ' brought slohly. the type Waeltroken, evhich• made int- ," Rates for' fermere, already reduced
such • a man ' as Briand, in shites 91 '
,, butashrely as the white man advances paseible the 'prithinkt of a city edition, by tile, koherninent, are tobeOhl]
his. ev6;1.1tiona, Streehmami remelted Merthward, are creating a J:iienace to Earlier the. semi-official newspaper farther. cut in an, ehheayok to, :Put *lee-
•Ohstiletely hitneele., but he did have Whictli will prove one of , ...La. Nation Reurnagn.e puhlisbed ah eft, tetchy ph everh , concessiOn in the
tneedllerrerias of portherp develop- non& communique derrounting the Cut :thickly eettled Parts •of oldsOittario.,
- The .412letiCICOS &:a(le •their eystete
the irierig though ,he was Ormer stlit.e. Eskimo
Imperialist, lo uthlerSeand • ha e
th Mkt, they say; . , . . The ,government contends tnet etea-
• • Carefellyhahd when. Noe order a bar- • • • " ... 0.- t-' -i
in Weight, , despite ,bein,g Moderately
Policy of reeieting the pit ce tie y, T ' 1 't ' • ' ' '' h' 't • 'ri t C ' l's
ventuI campaign for tCarols• retarn,
.o,ta. ly wi bout immuney to white sa mg 1 • wee eget s . aro oh,
• • ... ti city, more than any other factor, is , ._ . . t. , priced In this mareliel ntay be eau. .
the po,ey ( f reverige, haft no elm ce offeetting' the tendency, t. he .know.."..
mans' , disease tb Pak' b t r t . •• •
, . e a aim succum s e es e. e • stepin combine:1ot, a ."Mocielfit"
. to eirift• trent ret or a., ttrtem stashdhrd
• in h. a'l of urifcirm s:ee... •Seine finite -- ,
to . ailinente Which , are emisidered • --The °gOverninent headed by Prerni e land he the city.. • With power - ••• . • ten tie with eoke ion ,. oi • e c este
f • 't•' 't the i
of tifigairg tit:anti te• hia scrn'int.ry, , • . ' there will be to manv dozen oysters , • • • •
eivtlization "teward the. Arctic "War 'after! teadingthe gOuntry edition
•'wealth •and fame; but perhaps. -this
class ,was riot Willing •to come after
,Jesets and only , few.,rich. -hien ipin,4
•••••• his cease... • •
. . • •
•:. V. lithJesus ,deee not theielg •freni
ask-ing 'these meet to gihe up '• their
calling: Iris fact; thee° was no sacrifiee
that • jeeegvaould not 'eek his diseiples
• make:, if necessary. - He: denianded
• ,.. of .all.thoee whe were to folletvt
that they 7eleould take.up.., heit. Grote
and fellow,": ' ' • , • " • . •
...geeueselidgetteepeet them' to. do this
with 'any reconipeeteg'Welie held out
•' to them a:much 'finegkind of lite than
' •••.that which' theytwere .givirig tip. They
, • were tit be fishers of mkt:and we -ft
••,•gherefothi..te, 0M:el-ilea with a much
. nobler and more interesting duty. • .
' • '
of the Carolist newspaper Cuventul,
• • 20. The respOnse is immeduite.
tThere.seerns to he a capacity for sacri-
: tee hur nature, tidgeh is Gee of our
• noblesthealitiee. Every age tells ue of
the many :men and women who have
'Inirrendered wealth 'arid.. Coitifott to.
°• follow the gall oggesus into the most-
•emeote and difficult work.. •
• V. ,21. These. four men fermed. the
•first group Of the Twelve, and they
continued to have the first place in the
development `Of the church. •
• : '• •
V. 22.,"Perhape we can' understand
g'the immediate aceeptenee better if We
thitik their business is worth keeping
alive, as they send all sizes 6f shell
•oyeters• elm same -barrel, and the,
dealet. never knows jest .what he AS
getting , • °
SI Oyster Producers
"The Aniericap ()hetet .producer
are tahing possession of :this market
and going the eighhway .about it., If
yon went Mgr gehdirig hjtel in
Montreel to -day .1' deubt. iftyou „could
jtet 4'"Canahien • •oneter.' • t The hotel,
trade, an • iimportaot. trade, hathlieep
lost. tca the -Caradian oysters hecause
when •the ehefs melee , American ohs-,
tees They know ,,inc.t what they. are
getting...
Ainericansg Market, • Pratttce .
The New Modes
In Lingerie. ,
•
.T9 •foret a suitable feendetion for
the new silBouette, it was ineviltlet
that linsgerieeshoeld" be designed IA
a _Manner bErsicallk, different trent,
that whitth suited the straight lines,. se
long 'waists and eltort skirts of the '
imetediate past. •, •• '
' A 'solo garment, quite unlike the.
.old • "Teddy," . iSga snag-htting gar-
ment, made to cling at the waletline•
by a' holtehitting .hapdeae,, and. equip.
tied .with a ;fitted hraiiiiere• fastening ?
on the side. • The 'attached .blocnatets "
ere made eitheit with elesed •Igtee or •
'finished with bands.
New Raisins
^
Togiteet the etrain eon, andeigega•
Methe -caused by 'file 'closer hitting:
•and•;longer.''skirte,. the menrifactueera
have ixiadiga special tionrun
cloth. the rayon,...tguatanteed net to
agahder.h. The goods is pleasing to
.the touch, and is finer and 'softer isle ^
finish than ragen underwear as mfg.
Malty introduced te the .consenter. At
the seine time, it Is of Course, 'rea-
sellable in price ••• • " '••,
Tilt§ line is made beth in Weenier,,
model and te a: penile with cuffs. In
• eaeh, ease thete close -fitting yoke
• at the Waist., ,A seharate bandeau
••Completeaethe two-pleee set .A tape- .
cial garment in the same. material Is
the. ajunthorhe bionmer for *irk large ' .-
weinen,..while by contrast therm are
he children's blodBier and . vett,
le -
sides a. uelon stilt, • t
' Ahether new superfine product, the•
result of the thtinufaetererte
tied endeayote to give to •thotheg g
tige. garmente at hlie. lowest ' price it
'could •he made; it. a eahong refined • to.
silk -like delicacy. .More; it is 'said to'
• be the only rayon on •the market: that:
is made son. a silk machine, and "proe.. ,
dueed , by the, same worhmen twhe
make the silk gartnente. -This ...Ma-
terial also is rungileof; anti hhe „gar-
ntehts. made of .it •are of "silltg • softe
nese, delichtfel to the tOueh and light
read John. 1: 35. •
IL THE BEGIN:NING OF THE MISSION,
23-25.
V. 23. A most compreheneive .verse,
giving at outline of the work of Jesus.
likre picture the active movementi of
Jesus and his disciple c as they go front
sehtlace to place in Galilee. They go
first to the tovveyhear the Lake of
• , Galilee, then they nh to the village in
the interior, and afterwards make
,
longer trips; always returning to
Capernaum.' In each village there was
a synagogue. This was the• meeting
. place of the Jews, and it was built in
sorne conspicuous place, on the hill-
toP, th beside a tier., It was,the Most
eett . importapt building .of the village, like
^...• the church today in some countries.
Here services • were held every Sab-
bath, ' and also ' on two week -days.
There was the reading of the Old
Testament, and exposition. The syna-
gogue s was also a school for the chil-
dren, where they learned' i t, read and
and to know the law. '
It was natural that Jesus should go
first to these places of religious influ-
ence, and he never rieglepted the ser -
vies in theseplaves. We are told it
Luk, eh. 4, of the thee when he went
to -the synagogue in Nazeretin where'
t be had been brought up, but we have
no account •of a full sermon preached
in the synagogue. ' Most -of the ser-
mons re'ported were delivered eut:of-
mihor Misfortunes in the t life dt al 'Merge mill never permit Carol. teeonhe avAlIable' ts'nere ts no eittheonventence • • , .. • a
. ,
eaiti breads On,
fittene abriefe" 'affected by. the irotthg•
mest every- :white, child,. He'sufeeres back' from Paris, where he lives with
that ceanreet . be •had On the ss zapat be/s1 0.'s.l...fff..3 1111,11.fr.,r,P. ,
. • • .. e rzirl.. 1 Nightgowns. acccanpahtt every'.
• ;Pal -mere 'are , finding. electricity , chhalt. firm' pas a saiadzYone whleh• pats . het". . . : • ! . ... - • ' '
its •'- ,
iew_. trade mark on every .63-ster It sells of ••• AH ,„14(:,,.. ..,.. . . . , : , ; i • •
e'r • for ,meehanicel chore, than e t tY0O, boods ale. ..tif
line ,pewet. '•..•• . e ,
' With e at efisi op, • of rural' . limes. teed
,extensive ' .develottmehts. la' the cities,
the :proyinee faces a •power shortage.
To offset this. the 'provincial cern
-.1aoritioh po...fry.. :trews (Mr, f rem,. Malnutrition; when fed white' Medame..,.Magdas. hpesc . •
a:hhe cern
ostage says that no :Mee sugeeede man's toed, and yet he gorges. himself inunique, said. 'Neither'. Will Mania eh'
who, never takes the opportunities with it wliedeyer possiblel He, eon- low 'any, elteration a . the • present
offered. him and sthe . unhIelty tracts tuberculosis from wearing store throne slaw. - • ,
earilitt---be a sacceSsful than): 4-4-7clotbing 'under unthuitabla:cdnditionst Creventui had aseerted. the. Coutitrg.
Mere "iuck"evtialever it may be= and., yet .be 'likes them: Measles, wished Cai•oleto. return' • and assume.
ht t •titch he re-
'pere. Meiier.ritY to great 'Place and '•and ,othet sailments he ,gets•froms.the nounced for his reiettess.'graiseion, has just contracted for 200e
make a men successful? 'It May float. whooping cough, chicken pox, ,grippe . .
even apparent -newer. ,tet if he is white man., and ,yet he ie most happy • ', • • a -bit() horsepower from -the Beauliarnois
deVelopineut in the...Bt.:Lawrence aud
only a iriediherity he will. not' ioug ih• tbe latter's conitiany..
•
retain theplace, and he will never be
able to really weereise the power. Hes
he then "succeeded?" .. Again, the
successful man mest take his opPort
tuiaitiee; :yes, but .mere often . than
.ot he west Make theste toe,.
'''The Root Protocol
Menaces Own 'Food Supply • •
• his •destraction: • Deepite his Wend -
Ile tame the -adventage . of trade
with the 'white' an •itito, an agency'. for
ly nathretand goodheattedness he is
•a ea .. . .
ehoots 'all the game he lean find, and
uutimsately mag,traneforin a naturally
'bountiful: country into a land of . hen -
New York hu61.: 'Whether tire spr.oto-
• ger.
col is kept in camphor for a. year, or, . ..
Six sth'ourrand persons 'spread 'over a
five •years, . its : opponents will he land as long as the notthern coast of
teddy for it when it cornea out. Sena- Canada are. an asset, 'ollicfale declere. .
tors Borah, •alcises and Hiram John-
! They point • Cut that the - Eskimo is,
eon, all m'embers of the 'Parolee He- and•:will be • still mine, the agent.o
lations COmmittee, are bitter efieinies
of the Root protocol and -all are
fighters. And there are eloquent' men
ine private life who , will. raise their.
i es a ainst Arrieriean entrance ID -
The .:Beanfield • is pushing its own ' developments at
Chate ss
• .
A geanfield• in fell! hlaisOm tnielis
• '
, as sweet .
leg Arabg, or groves ot orange •flow-
ers; •
Black•eyed and ithitea•and feathered
, •
• • his new •ifle the'
t killerWiths1
vo c g
to the League Court exteptewith the
• .
GIV,ING.THt DETECTIVi,A GLUE
Detective (Investigating epee): te'foft
fice boy: aWhe arrives at Mfg -office
first in the morning, Mr. Jones or his'
partner?" . • . .• • •, .
0010. Boy.: `Shmetimes one, some-
times the, other, sir.'" t'
'Detectiee: t'Cart hoe give the Any.
inforidation by Which L can diseoeet
on what day Mr. Jone8 ts• likely 'to gr -
rive first?" • .
Office Bey:. "Well, sir, at first he
was alhays last, butetater he began to
get etirliet; til•I at la' t•he Was first;
altheughhirefore he le 1 always' been
behind, he soon got later • again',
though of late „ he has been tamer;
and at • last be got behind as • before.,
I expect hell be getting. earlier sooner
in:. later." •
Falling ingove recoMmended in
cases of threatened nervous • break-.
down. A cynicat eorrespOndent says
that e far lessdangerohs remedy is
to fall In front ot a, double -decker -bits.
the white 'man in icy lands wherethe
latter cannot live lohg. '•. •••
•
Those who have been .aseociated
s .
with .the 'Eskimo longest say eiviliiat
tion, unceibed, will do one three
thiege.eto absorb him; kill hitri,
or drive him northward. •• •
Hope Seen in Education
They are confident, however, that
something can gte• done to help the
Eskimo ;save_ htmself..:. Education,
they, believe, will develop in ,his hap-
•py-gogticky mind a .sehsts of protect:
ence' Which will enablehim to look
after hisefuture food supply and , -to
treat his personal property leseheck-
leetly. , Medical 'servioe; they think,
will .save him from • the disease: he
. seeress bituna to epptract in settled dis-
tricts, While his' own predisposition
te health Will save him when he .19 far
away from the white man. .
There is. one 'evil .from which the
Eskimo is free. , Arctic. :Lethargies
say. • He does' not like liquor, He
will take a .drink. if he le premed to
do so, but does not seem to care if
he never has another.; is
• .An English elergyma14 eredfcte
war between sexes. Think hoiv the
masculine .aenty :will quail when the
feminthe .host eries "Cif/lege Jag'
• • to one's. feet, ,
HOW sWeet••they smell in moraines
. • .
'
:dewy hours!! , • . •
When seethieg. night ie left, upon the;
• dowers.- I•,••
And when merit's' sun' shims lorightly
. 'o'er:the field, ••
And bean bloom glitters in the gems
.. of showers, ••
And sweet the fiwgrance which the
• union yields •
:To battered footpaths crossing o'er
•• the het&
John Claee (j-793.1861).
. •
origiaal reservations which, the Sem
ate wrote ,and Europe rejected.'
. ,
His work is divided into teaching
and preaChing. The first of these was
More informal, aid would include an-
lls 'on "d titio
Jeseurs arridequ'el'
ntlich of teaching, and the
while his fol. th6aen and bang a thumb with
•
' . South African Problems
Madras Mail: .The ceuntry is, yoUng,
precociouti and, • at times; errespoas-
ibleg, In the contplexities 'Which fate
heft is unique ageing the self-govern-
iith. countries of the Bemire; and upon
its hehdlieg of them' net only does its
own•future-but als-for thit is a test
case --does the future ot the Empire
depend to a vere large degree; these
complexities it has US .face, and in-
sitte upon hieing,' for itself, •
A man, in Brooklyn, eentenced for
wife -beating, was 'instructed' to 'kiss
his • wife •every peening for six
months. After all, it le the woman
who pas sand' pays.. ,
"Antbody eau learn to dance," says
an instruetor. The, sintplest method
is tb volunteer to put Up a shelf in
TeaCher,
eves
Iewere
•
were caller "diSciplee"
aer the haminee • .•
MUTli. AND JEFF
-
By BUD FISHER.
P 1 and Carillen on th,e Ot-
tawa River; which will give a total
If 275,000 ....____,Imeseporrer,
• •
Ornamental Patches .
wri er had 'a :pair of bleak
satin evening stigpeeswhich were
Perfeetly kood except for ,wore. places'
near the ,toes and.'on •eithersideof
the vamps Where the surface' had
brushed off, leaving dull .apots.• To;
•conceal these•effects and to melte the
slippers suitable to wear with a goldt,
en colored•froch, a yard of heavy gold
metal:lade was bonght, which had .a,
design easy t� cut out and .use as an
applique. These applique -Patterne
were .placed in eesitions ccimpletely.
to cover the hides, .the
'black satin' merely showing through
between the 'keg The sewing had to
he carefullydone, but the isuJt was
entirely satisfactory . The ippere
:did not look repaired, but %vete tithe
elegant.
a cerisain grade. "Others bore. a •hole.
;through the shells of „egery. ()este:.
andattech a tag that certifies to its
grade,‘and quality: The dealer, atici
the perchaser at retail has tomet"hieg:
to go on, and ip moretend more inyt
ing Ameticap osteth •instead of:tale
ing a• chence on a hared ot Canadiaii
oysters. And why not? The average
adays seldom tastes: a,
adian oyster, and •few
s in' the Way.
coristimer no
sucethent Ca
ask or
POliti
aottase, forutility,•and • amide to eon' ..
at mediten pries, ath'there are. no
elt borate. :decorations- ..•• . •
Elegorate. Style •
.. But the si1k geode hi.thigetie make.•
:see for. whatever May he,Jacking In
hhe more utilitarianstglee. For even-, ••'..
ing wear, end for every 'sort of dreis .
•Oceasion,' the lingark'I ofthis season
unexcehed: in color, in.. variety . of
design ' and in atigineatn,g.s. : For ;int
stainee;• a alendeielittleagetmentecalledt
a.' 1,sciety", withobt an tech of •, •
fiuouse Material 1» it, in, pink or Wya-f .
ciuth, yeghas lace edees witheinierth '•
o. lace insertioeh aid a Charming bit,
of hand embroidery iat the topatang ,
on each pantie .at • the bottotith
• lateltnet. in dainty blue or a hetet-
shaped forgeenre-not decoration...
One outfit iu the green. of new
ota, has a, diag-
ee which forms•
antie,. and he -
ornieh of this
Were separ
and 1iad ,o tirgigils tope, . with
separate bandeau in finest Woven
gilks,• soft and clinging te the. toucl.,
A notable point about therehigher-
:priced goods is that, each- gargeeat
has been cut and, lifted with a view
to eliminatingevery shred (genre'
needed cloth in the cutting t nil nem- ;
ming.. Lace is ‘,:oNved .on w11 hoot fial-
ness, trisettione of lace arc p!teed in
thme.bottems Of , bloomers, wh IA are
cut as harrow a's... consimcat with
preeticabilitga and the. intertion adds
nothing in bulk. Lane are tile and :
fitted about •the. bodice and,' ides •ste
the ,fit is entircly ?finagle Tho rnedels
ere pee., sveil I aciltil; ewer, tittle
and distinguhletl.
Net to. he nmerted h eat thlang the
new oiferipgs. are 1111e Poji1:11.t bill
quite different from. the lona ette yeti, .
• f till -jack et ed :raja ma of 'old. Indeed.
Many of these new rejenta to have
tro 'sleeve'sv,lltty Jnsleisd eliere
Is a separate coat sio,2vo,s 'which
is reinovell- fat hieep tr. .71; tee .sete
are made in not et • cornhinahrons Of
cetera.. Blatt: trothert aro • shown.
With coat with'. lilat,k Ilf.1* for
trimming; er aleen pets 'whet
paler breen •con1; or yellow and black
confp.teations. *Put itatever the col-
or,' the sleehelesa pajama is necepteth
tied he many is regartied lie fai. mora
comfortable tbli),,the model- •.laj the
Jthg sieevtit. t • ••• g .
Thenren of a:1 ':11.1cc and. fili,in:ts'1,av,e,
petite ps, a Insorei•-varied and suitable
'sel 1 loll Of lingerie than r:It'sc •pre -
,1,10115: heittive Mentt
aTbe entire,' e Is at the producing
end and Petit es' stand in •the way of
the deeIopnntof Oster fisheriee
on a huhines • ba.siO, There is eon -
Stet, of lutist] ctioe ,bettteen the ped.:
Oral and Prov eclat 'authority.' A man
Inv go to t 4 Gete-hfixteet, of New,
Brunswick ai d" oh . "a•a lease of bot-
toms Isuitabl for • ai cultivation on
the uhherttai 0".•• tbat• he••will plant
ea many fr r, a year on beds that
have •tt • •u pleted. • It might be
thonglit that that man' when' his oys-
ter. ranch,. h d• .become ripe totake
off a crop w uld beeallowechtp decide
Whenhlie should dgedge his surplus
oyster and offer them on the market.
htut no. • /he Pedetal Government
fixes the tithing season, ,.necessaeily•
short, if allthe public beds are not
to be depleted right 'off; and the pri-
g irate oyster ranches has to damp: his
crop one glutted market at sacrifice
Australia Closes, the •Door •
• Dublin: • Irish ' Times t ',Seullin has of public beds, who have made no
Proe.laimed publicly that Australia 'capital investment, .Most. if »�t All,
•cemeat take 'any More ,'Britone. . This the • ,attemptsh to . eatehlish oester
• mete is all the More reiniirkable » ranches off the thotee of New flr0ns-
view
einflieonfth jefact eos thatnl
nioe
sir:eizsaltyhe with have been faliures.
tst"
' .• •P.E.I,, Farmers Own Ocean- °
insisted time • and " agein that a, Nil eggte Ite„.ate it!e*1 . enter
hWaite".Australig is the airri ofteyery ioni 01,t ,law or custom the farm•ers,
citizen. • The seggeetion now that the who ere ottally fleherineh tit certain
Conthionwealth cannot absorb 9'000 seasona, claim 'the gight to 'fish for
settlers • pet .arnittin .4ndicates that oyster's in waters lying off the fore;
Australia, is. in a bad way; but tits shore of their ferms. And they are
consensus of opinion teeing to he not inclined to surrender that eight
prices • in . competitiop with dredgers.
grass jest at, the r
„deal piece ef• ecru 1
a large part ()heath
brassiere; as well; is
lace. • Other pant°
ghat Mr. Seullin hals exaedereted the in order 14 Periliiit_... a 'private firnt to
, . .
'
ehuntrys condition.• start dyitet piped:tip; they hold -on
t
- ....-.......ge-........... g
to it, even -after, the beds off Their
lands have been depittrd. hoping.that
. Motorists get fete. meet' trouble
noutadays: not in trying to keep up paten* Wilgrestork thein t:orne time,
With the aonateat but in tying to pess
them. . to the benefit of their beirs if not to-
themseleee.
In the Dawn's Early Light
• OW Catiatt BOX, Fotigt RetiJann
,.4l -n-' semitoDY
rkes AteotAb r‘e
ittLock:
Octs MoRmINGI it •
Is Si( A.M.ut wiLl
rART ThEmotzkitNG'S
Eft -times BY teggitIG
tvoms-se-Lt.4
-Owes,
Illti•111,111111
•‘--,...re • 6
1.••
• •
'
•
••
•
gg'"gh g-gAttUfgat Ightga
..
._
Folly it 'hitt bet•mnin-e a ti,':1Ate,
.0.11Z •
• abo1.11. nirmi. The - . •
treetherteeeteterenestageheelhateta.4ht.the
1.1 . Vrel'S.' iuo ttoi:ut alrent 'ft
•t dt edict faorte
t, • wit
aikt*...11 •• !O 111 11 ',4:7-1 1.
,31 s our • t
tter.
three, T: s ,,, 1 of. Tli.t tirn, ig
. ease ea, pthe. endaro Ir)
on Or hohee adf flii1. d ettee
sonetting 'ettat , 'tee?, .exaitiets
toe:thingtliet ivr.1 give ps' t1tsr-
rible. thibie We rail having a.thard •
--heethelihrt Et Itilme1 g.
r e, • •• '
• .,
'
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