MON EY TO LOAN ! : on Ak bs Brith Sagi} 3 en! on. ot He a ketiivied wih AEAL ESTATE us Licenses. rei ie Crown TOS. BA en Trunk R'y System 1CEN ED AUCTIONEER | for. th Bums of Untgrio, Sale Region T i ME TABLE. Poxt Fara. ice Pht hinge solivite inane, Bu; 19, 1589." GOING BOUTIN COING NORTH. Gli Aa.0n 5:55 P-tiry 33 Pm 2 ives to yr) p ge spared? uk wall atk niles: dn dribbun to m. | 0p, VAVTS, Town Agent © Mails Closo. "The mails are EeAghd from the Pc: Office Port Perey as follois : Gog North-- v.00 a. m. Going South--11.20 a, mw Going North-- 5.15 p. m. ting South --10 p. Farm to Rent f HR UN. ERSIG NE ID OTFERS TO v RENT his farm in the township of O Cartwright - being South , ¢on 6; --contai ing 100 ¢ -- buildings. Jiving stream oréiant | For further past to I5e pice: ctor ob should by ein yecom | mendution : as. to. hia ability: Al. Sale given to his charge will be: attended b ith pronpiuce nod. dispateh | Bade lat d blank notes supplied free. ling to cagage "his servi i hie SaLx Rrdisren either at Ah inultured ani the Qbincar 3 Ottizes, Posty Ir foe a for Males atid Hid nadress tenes, No. 31 a - Obl "ak aiid . i a ABREAN, OND. FOUASDAY HORN = Pons at R fra Rtn So ve TL be oseried; ni ih Ro: ksh wh 9 ior ner So ons ind ppl fo. Peas pared to exccute all or Making thanks 1 the pubis for the for He Titel patPonage received during the if years I* have kept a Livery Establish ed | i | } | | { | | { ofa where | | | { Ihave mauh pleasure in | | annouacing that I have removed MY Ll 144 ERY ! ia Meni in Port Perry, fect. Oar char rzés' are cons st the. value given with! "extend jo. i i +0 that the pubhe wo he | etgat po alate, With, enfe sad desir- DERATE. CEARGES R. VANSIC peace | ' sou do, Tw oR 'band they plea 10 becauoy sell find | forts Hable, Ihe diet is 10 the El Dy HAROLD MAC GRATH Copyright, 1908, by the Bebbs. Merrill Co. empty van caitt Stein" She Was Row leaning across the table, her BOungers tense on the cloth. "l bought that stein two seasons ngo. Fhis is the Sandfords' place, and you are the veiled lady who has been riding Mrs. Saundford's favorite huuter in the park." They stood up simultapeousiyd a a matter of this sort he was by fur; the sassy in an iostant be bad caught her by the wrist, at the same time drawing ber irresistibly round the ta- ble tewnrd him. "1 ust ree your face, 1 shall never 3 be ft peace If 1 do not." "Certalnly You will ever know any erste) 'erg And not want this to end. If you. wii not let me kve your' face of your awn free will, so be ii. 1 shall sce it some day, mark me. Fate does not etoss two paths in this man- ner witliout a. purpose." Ile stepped back slowly. "You do not understand the lure of that mask." "Perhaps | do. | am begloning to odtnire Your self control, Mr. Hillard. But 1 min tired new, and 1 must ask- you to go _"Onge more, rou face" "No. If, as you say, fate intends for us to meet agaln you will see it. Ba will you let me see 1 bave wy doubts. Ra it is wy will to; Bt pasa out of your Hfe as cotupletely 8s though | had never entered it=from U one fog iuto another. No, | am not ai happy woman, 4 am not happy in my: friendships. Listen to me," and her volce grew low and sweet, "let me appeal te your imagination. This ligh adventure shall be a souvenir for ¥0Ur old ape. One night romance stepped futo your life and cut of it. 'Fbink! There will always be the same chneny § the same roystery, the Same coche | ment. 1 shall always be Clodereila | or the sleeplug beauty or what yourh fancy wills. Do you understand me? "Nothing," she proceeded, "nothing | lasts so long In the recollection ®3 a pleasant wystery <n other aays, Wi other thes Well, on my side } shail, recall his night. pleasanily. Without | kpawing it 'son have given Die & New foothold tn fife. 1 id not belove that there Hived a finzle man who cotiid: edn to the ldetfer of tlw bargat Good nigbit! And do not lean ont any mare windows." she added ght} "Yul ave right," he sakl reluctantly "gomethitg to dram over tu ny dy age. Ami certainly | shail dren or I---a flush a oben the window." th | "Nobody va 1" he shouted. "Cone 3 some one here last | 'shouted back: Fhat bouse has Leen since ber, 1 bappen to to his cab dazed No one there d there was a would secon 8 ike somewhere. He whethet or not he might before. i he cried to the Onee the apd recun Then he i him ¥10 la ho received You are cra telephoned downtown dfopd'a cable address. ut a btank. which cost hit night at the club §'reply. It was terse-- House absolutely empty SANDFORD. oe an inexcusabily i [le grounded bis al back what's the matter : with * asked Merribew, out of nd." [Iillard agreed. 'Ter bt taking the interest ip that | tornierly took." ihe | e # proposition," pr cilew, lo vide to the Cat L buok. something you would hdl nt oR year ago, you sbake I'hiok of tt By George, ¢ thine Inst yet! You best trip we ever 3 Where's your spirit 1n't know where ft Is 1h the game wre going to throw ft lke red Merrihew. atnst your half a studying the Re ttle that | beat yo hew. Being on le a clean score of I can see you pay: down to a brilliant play kl:ty are in beautiful form assed upstairs to the ; Merrihew filled the | plas je nir of one who would he remalider of his days | -pot that he was it enc bottle temporarily that crop of imperishable fm the world grew roseate viewed through the press rape. and ingariably . peckouing to the card ov we del k. I've got you where v 1 er fourhed | ir t plight? Cowe, come; | from. the foriner it is wrilten that he wrought | evil in the eyes of the Lord and did | | worse than all that were before him. | and of the latter it is written that he did | evil in the sight of the Lord above all | that were before him and did more to provoke the Lord God of lsrael to an- | ger than all the kings of Israel that were before him (verses 25, 30, 33). | What a reconl of increasing iniquity | and how great the long suffering of | Jehovah that could bear with it! But: | we must consider tuat evet sigco the | serpent tempted Eve, and how much | | longer we do not know, God has pa- tiently borne with the devil and will! continue to bear with him till the time | | of Liev. xx, 13. While there is no | hope for that great adversary revealed | fu Scripture, as to men it is written | | that the Lord is long suffering toward | us, not willing that any should per-| tsh, but that all should come to re: | pentance (I1 Pet. iil, 9). i The greatest sinner may be saved if | be will only turn from his sin to God, | | but for all who will not turn there is | naught but the flaming fire i 3 yon | ance of H Thess. i, 8, 0 | which burneth with fire aud rs) of Rev. xxi, 8. 1f atty will not receive the troth God will let them believe al He, and for all who will not bow to the word of God pre is no morning | for them (11 Th y 11, Isa. vill, 20, margin and R - In all the bis: | tory of the ten tribes there was not one ruler who feared the Lord, but all walked fo the way of Jeroboam, the son of Nabat, who made Israel to sin (verses 20, 81). | During the forty-one years of the, reign of Asa over Judah, who was on the whole a good king and most of the time did right In the sight of the Lord, | six of the kings of the ten tribes either reigned or began to reign, and each one. is. mentigued by mame in connec: | 1 Fear of Asu's reigu who "he began to reign (xv, 23, 28, 83% xvi. | 8, 10, 13, 28, 20). No less than eight times do we find Asa mentioned in| counection with the names of these kings, and it is to me suggestive of} the wheat and tares of one of our | Lord's parables, concerning which He said, "Let both grow together till tha barvest."" Iu this case it was not aim. | cult to distinguish the righteous trom | the wicked, but often We cannot tell here, wheat and tares in some stages of growth look so much alike. | The wicked prosper, are not in trou: Dle like other men, they are proud and lofty aud very often die peacefully (Ps 1xxiif, 2-12), and Asaph ls not the only one perplexed thereby. The righteous and (he wicked die, and often their bedies lie side Ly side in the cemetery, and where Is the difference? The up right shall have domivion over them in the morning of the first resurrection, when only the bodies of the righteous shall rise from the dead (Ps. xlix, 14) When we return with Christ then shall we more fully discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth God and bim that serveth Him not (Mal. iii, 18). Rulers {ke Oniti and Ahab will flour ish greatly at the end of this age under the patronage of the antichrist and his companion the false prophet who will not hesitate to blaspheme God aud His name and make war with the Lamb and His people, but they shall be suddenly overthrown (Rev. xili xvil. 14; xix, 19, 20). Then shall be fully fulfilled that which bad a fulfill ment when Christ was here in humilin tion: "Why do tbe nations rage and the people tmagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulets take counsel together agains the Lord and against His anointed." | The Lord shall have them in dert sion, speak unto them ju His wrath and His king in Zion shall hreak them with a rod of iron and dash them in pleces like a potter's. vessel (Ps. ii). "The lofty looks of man shall be bum- htiness of men shall glory. apt ali the are of rine, dor dsa fl 13, 17; xxiil, 9). This! woman Jeézabel, whom Ahab married of whose desperate wickedness wa shall; lear more In future lessons, hig minds us of, another Jezabel of Rev. il, 20-23, some of whose relatives are working great mischief and leading mally stray In out' own day. This form of Inlquity will be consummated Jn the woman of Rev. xvik Babylon | | "the great, and great will be her over brow both as a system and a city. 'As truly as the ten tribes were ca Wied away futo captivity because ot | thelr sin after God had borne long with them so surely will God punt] he svorid for their evil and the Nene for thelr fuiquity in (he day of His anger of witiing for every individu ound fi : He enets tu if yon ares: spent 11f6--Dry, olen; is Ly LOLTEY pnts SE Tat led a Sorby Ss t pk ev op Bs a tho 1 y yon r cso belo oral they will teil you bouesiiy Books Freo on Discases of = { ueition. Bi YOU CAN PAY Ma Ds. cr Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswoid St, Beto! All letters {re to onr Can ment in Wind THE "OLD FOLKS" HOME BONN, GERMANY, LOOKS DOWN | UPON YOUTH. . it Is the Place Where Most Charming | : Little Old Ladies In the World Are Found -- The Utmost Respect Is Shown to Old Age and It Is No Dis- grace There to Add a Year Every Birthday. "ol folks" e of Germany" th what Bonn, on the Rhine, might be called most appropriately. Students and old people. make up the popuia- tion of the city, t including, of course, the members Eo the regiment stationed there. students are there becatse they sod Bonn quite the best place on earth to spend their last years. | One-quarter of tie Papuisition con- | ir | sists of rentie on safe income more than { there are known as e., people who live and of this quarter haH are widows. In fact several streets in Bonn widows' rows," which are lined with villas, ordinary houses or small apartments, according to the size of the safe incomes of the inhabi- tants. Instead of trying to disguize theif age as is the wont of womankind these old ladies have to keep tabs on each other that they do not add a year or two when no one iz looking They are all the loveliest little old ladies with the whitest hair and t pinkest cheeks, and they ull d more or less alike with little black bonnet, plain black gown with a bod | ice cut a wee bit low at the neck, and a shoulder cape of lace or s Lhe 7 is only one execption to this rule, t one woman who tries to be your than she i ut she is ostracized i the beat soc py herself with her lavends false curls and lingerie ha The old men of this city Interesting) Every day in tb hour, when the children come ! from' school, they stop in front library windows of the most [ able club in town and ggg! display of bald heads lined against a background of newspapers. But they do n giggle audibly, for to show an: respect toward its old citiz commit as grave a crime in Bonn as to insult the Kaiser in Berlii Perhaps it is because the regular lives that these cha people of Bonn are so full of i JO3 of living, so hale and so hear Be tween 10 and 11 on sunny mornings they are all taking a morning walk, nd in the aftermoon, when they are 10t enjoying one of the 1,000 little Rhine excursions, they are taking a second. They do mot just amble around a flower bed im a perk and come home again, but they set out with a definite purpose to see a defi: nite thing and they ged there with & determination that is remarkable. po less Neo ome night to the hi} s for a celobrati ay. For birthdiys in extraontin especially in. Bonn, dre nary occasions, ® Every summer when the 'holiday time sets in they all go off on & long- er trip, and those who feel that they cannot leave the comiorts of home close their front blinds and pretemd that they have riigrated with the rest. When they are all home again they go off on "bats" together just like the young people. and though, many: of them are restricted 40 a glass o of wine or even further te "aot rinks they manage to have ad good a time as anyoue on the boast. What i$ mote, they add to the gayety of the 'outh on board by their jolly good hu- mor Sh their funny old jokes, and when Germans begin to' ing they join in with more' good wili Gib in thelr voices. e Winter time they go to every: thing eee is hho 3 3 rg Ww Rn alter they have cens- - able 10 see and hear ever treinea mus Mai wy what whites does- it does to cateh rin must take ab read of the one 1 order to make it, od" that wonder bedut: ti ient in the hope that the same ration tiny be shown them y ted, grow old Trials of the Potato. 8 the first potato wes planted nd, in Homony, about Raleich A Japancse Wedding. anese wedding is a quaint'y The bride, dress no and white ; her affianced rushand tabl 1 one « t tle of sake 2 a tt with two th e other are a min ture tork long g and A ANC hi roo spree k- tile Knights Templars. During the laiter enth century pilgrir began to be ut or Sartace Holy Land. Liu herhood with the object 'at i the pilgrio The Fu r Ny over Europe and the Lnights grew to legions in pumber Vows of chastity, obedience rity Fare taken, and th all of the elev- erusalem he Turks of the Sadelep { » lane a in th inelosu cople ount Moriah, nt hee © the 'nana Templars, ar Knights of the Tempis n of Balom "Visiting Church 6n Wheefs. Superintendent G. C. Hennessy, of §t. . Anthony's Chapel Cer, of. th Catholic Chureh Extension Ba : has had a bus o large. crowds wi to the Higtion cor on its Ontari late in the. "afters tinue. to pass int The: E Many® prayer fof 'a Shore ith froin St. Anthony for another. Tragedy o The author of den' tel star study 3 fomint WATRIN Ee he