Be on hand promptly in the morning at your place of business, and make it a point never to be late, and perform cheer- fully every duty says the Southern Church Advocate. Be respectful to your employ- ers, and to all in authority over you, and be polite to every one; politeness costs nothing, and it will help you wonderfully in getting on in the world. And abcve all. be honest and truthful. The boy who starts in life with a sound mind in a sound body, who falls into no bad habits, who is honest. truthful and industrious, who remembers with grateful love his father and mother. and who does not grow away from his church and Sunday School, has qualities of mind and heart that will insure him success to a remarkable degree even though he is endowed with only ordinary mental capacity; for honor, truth and industry are more than genius. Don’t be foppish in your dress, and don’t buy anything before d on have the money to pay for it Shun billiard salloons. and be Careful 3m": you spend the evenings. Cultivate a taste for reading, and read only good books. With a love for read- ing, you will ï¬nd in books friends ever true, and full of cheer in time of gloom. What sort of a library have you in the house? asks The Christian Standard. In some homes. even where there are chil- dren growing up, two or three stupid old books comprise all the reading there is. We are afraid there not a few families where even a copy of the Bible is wanting- This is not as it should be. Every house- hold should have a supply of wholesome reading and read it. Some of the best stories, works of popular science, history, biography and travel, should ï¬nd a place in the collection. Books are cheap, and the pleasure they give inexhaustible. The farmers library should contain in addition to the kind of books mentioned, a few standard works on topics bearing especial- ly upon farming operations. . There are valuable works on agricultural chemistry, on the management of stock, on special crops. on poultry raising, etc. The list is a long one, but if a. judicious selection is made, a few volumes will answer the pur- pose as well as many. There is no power of love so hard to get and keep, writes Elihu Burritt, as a kind voice. A Kind hand is dead and dumb. It may be rough in flesh and blood, yet do the work of a soft heart, and do it with a soft touch. But there is no one thing which lOVe so much needs as a sweet voice, to tell What it means and feels; and it is hard to get and keep in the right tone. One must Start in youth, and be on the watch night and day, at work and at play, to get and keep a voice which shall speak at all timesthe thoughts of a kind heart. It is often in youth that one gets a voice or tone which Is sharp, and it sticks to him through life, and it stirs up ill will, and falls like a drop of gall upon the sweet joys of home. Watch the voice day by day as a pearl of great price, for it will be worth more to you in the days to come than the best pearl hid in the sea. 3 A kind voice is to the heart what light as 3 to the eye. It is a light which sings isl well as shines. l A staï¬' of eminent American Physicians and Surgeons have opened an oflice for medical and surgical attendance, at No. 2303 St. Catherine Street, Montreal. They give free services to all who call upon them before August lst, 1892, and frankly tell you if your case is curable or' not. All incurable cases are rejected. Special attention is haid to every case. Invalids living outside of Montreal should address their lnrters to MR. JOHN MURRAY, Manager, and enclose two 3 cent stamps for symptom blank and ques- tion sheets. Brought to thee with glad accord ! Thee my Master and my Friend, Vindicated and enthroned ! Unto earth’s rernotest end Gloriï¬ed, adored and owned ! â€"F. R. HAVERGAL. THE AMERICAN DOCTORS '(Q szjmctz'ce ix Europe 434’ America») Thee: {ny own beloved‘Lorfi ! Every tongue rhy name confessing, VVgrshipz homlr, glopy. ble§sing, 7 O,_t}le joy to sw _th_ee reigning, Anchored safe within the veil. Time appointed may be long, But the visinn must be sure; Certainty shall make us strong, Joyful patience can endure. Well may We rejoice and sing 1 Coming! in the opening east, Herald brightness slowly swells; Coming ! O my glorious Priest, Hear we not thy golden bells? \Vith a hope that cannnt fail; Asking not the «lay nor hour, Resting on‘thyi woijd_ 9f p9wer,_ Thcu art cunning, 0 my King In thy beauty all-resplendent, In thy glory all transcendant, Thou art coming, 0 my Saviour, Ebe "Watchman. THURSDAY, JUN E. 30 1892. Home Reading for the Young. SUNDAY READING. Starting in Life. A Kind Voice COMING. THIIR SERVICES ARE FRI-:5. jag Tommyâ€"“Ma, teacher wants to know the difference between efl'eCts and conse- quences.†3Irs. Figgâ€"“I think 1 can answer that. When your father came from that banquet last nip; ht: he felt the effects of it, and to- day hég' 1s suffering the consequences? First Parishioner â€"“I think we ought to raise Dr. Thirdly’s salary.†Second Parishionerâ€"“I don’t. He is such a. conscientiuus man that he would feel bound to preach longer sermons." Was invited to a place, the doxoloéy was sung. When the third line was reached they sang, ‘Praise God above, ye heaven- ly host.’ I noticed that they all glanced toward the mantle-piece, and on it I saw the photograph of a little boy who bore the family likeness, but was not present. There was method in that family worship.†“Anything more ? Yes; while the baby lay in the mother’s lap, the rest rose, and after joining hau ds so as to make a corn- plete circle, in which the stranger also “First came the reading of the Scrip- ture, which was interspersed with bright and earnest questions and with reverent remarks. The portion read struck me as wonderfully vivid and. real. Then came a commandment from this one, and a bea- titude from that. with a some sweet little application to the family life of the day before. Then followed two or three questions from the Catechism, and I saw that in the answering, accuracy was en- couraged. Next we prayed, and after a short and simple prayer by the leader, the older ones added each their special petitions, when all repeated the Lords prayer in unison Then there was sung one of the standard hymns of the church. “I was out Gospel-ranging. and was quartered for the night with a brother who had ï¬ve children; four were at home with him and one had gone to be with the Lord,†writes Rev. John Crawford, in the Christian Statesman. “The bright rays of the early sun, as they poured between the pot-plants into the warm stting-room on that winter week-day morning. were no more cheery than the six faces which greeted me when I sat down with the family for its morning meal. Nor was the meal itself, although it seemed to be absolutely perfect in its quality, prepar- ation and appointments, any more simple. savory and substantial than the dish of family worship which followed it. I noticed that those children were not com- pelled to worship God on an empty stomach, as are some unfortunate. Right joyously they trooped into the front room and took their places of daily family wor- ship. The following incident is related by Rev. J. N ewell, who has been laboring as a missionary in Samoa, but is now with Mr. Moody in Scotland : “A blacksmith residing in the North of Scotland had sav- ed up eight pounds ($40) against a ‘rainy day.‘ He heard a missionary give an ac- count of his work amongst the heathen, and his heart being stirred within him he resolved to help in the good work. Slip- ping out of the meeting he went home and took one-half of his savings and returning dropped them into the plate. His wife had noticed his absence, and as he resumed his place whispered, ‘John where have you been?’ ‘I have been home for the soverigns 1’ ‘I hope you did not touch them,’ was the next remark in accents of alarm. ‘Yes, I put four of them in the plate.’ ‘Man, you are daft.’ was all the reply she then made; but when they got home she gave John a pretty bad quarter of an hour upon his; wasteful extravagance. He assured her‘ that it was all right, for the missionary {had told him that whatever was lent to ‘ the Lord he returned many-fold, and that the loan of the four pounds would be no exception to the rule. His wife, however did not look at it in that way, and many a thrust John got about his softness in giv- ing away the money. About a year later a relative who had gone to the colonies and been very successful, remembered honest John, and sent him a. present of one hundred pounds. What joy there was in the house when the gift arrived. ‘There,’ exclaimed John in triumph, ‘you see the missionary was right after all, God has repaid what we lent to him many-fold.’ ‘Aye,’ sighed his wife, ‘If ye’d believed it then ye’d a giV’ all the eight sovereigns instead 0’ four of em.’ †I There is an old fable, which has a spe- cial application for young men of the pre- sent day. who are over-anxious for riches. It tells of a man who, after long trying, had never made a cent over expenses, and wno prayed to the god of wealth : “If thou wilt give me wealth, I promise to give thee half.†At the end of the ï¬rst year his books showed a saving of one dollar. He divided. The second year showed a saving of ten dollars. He divid- ed with thanks. The third year showed a saving of one hundred dollars. He divid. ed reluctantly. The fourth year showed a saving of one thousand dollars. He looked at it longingly a few times, then exclaimed, “ I can’t aflord to give ï¬ve hundred dollars,- if it were ï¬ve I could,’ and so saying he put it all in his pocket. Next day the god of wealth sent the god of ï¬re to take it all from him. A Story With a Moral for Younz Men. “I wish that you would talk to my daughter, sir. Perhaps you can have some influence for good over her. She won’t listen to anything that I can say." What sad Words were these to be wrung from the lips of a mother! “She won’t hear me!†Alas! who, then, will she hear? She will not listen to that mother whose eyes watched over her infancy, which have grown dim with many tears for her sakeâ€"she will not listen to the mother whose heart has never beat one throb that was not true to her real inter- ests. The self-willed girl knows not half the anguish contained in that one expres- sion and lamentâ€"“She won’t hear me ! " How One Family Worshipped. A Scotchman’s Investment. A Mother’s Lament. THE WATCHMAN. LINDSAY, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, I892. Disraeli is quoted as once savingâ€"â€" “When I meet a man Whose name I can- .not remember I gave myself two minutes; then if it be a hopeless case. I always say, ‘and how is the old complaint 1’ †“You may sit in the stern uf the boat and work the tiller, MISS Gaswell, if you Irate Passenger (as the train is moving oh")â€"-"‘v\'hy didn’t you put my luggage in as I told you ?†Porterâ€"“ Eh, man I yer luggage is no sic a fule as yersel’. Ye’re i’ the wrang train 1†Coachman (driving fat old lady on a lonely road in a. very high Wind)-“Please, mum, will you ’old the ’orses while I run after my ’at? or you run after my ’3? while I ’old the ’orses !†That man only has learned to live rightly who takes with a smile the world’s praise or blame, and with steady head and hand goes straight on with the work he has to do. Inquisitive Scotch School Board Oflicer (to Hibernian parent»)â€"â€"“Was your boy born in Glascae 2†“N o, sir and I hope he never will be.†“Oh, if the kilt could speak ! What a tale it would have to tell ()f the wild and bluntly battleï¬elds Where our fathers swore they fell.†Never condemn your neighbor unheard every story has two ways of being told, and justice requires that you should hear the defence as well as the accusation. Jessieâ€"“Mamma, what does pro and con mean ’3†Flossieâ€"“W by. I’m s’rrsed at your ign’rance. It mean man anr’ wife doesn’t it mamma." - After all the people who seem really to enjoy life are the genuinely pious people who possess a solid faithâ€"Jacob. Inquiring Childâ€""‘ Why do people cry at weddings 2†Papa. (abstractedly)â€"â€" “Most of ’em' have been married them- selves.†Wifeâ€"“Are you going ï¬shing to-day?†Husband â€"“ Yes, my dear.†Wifeâ€"- “VS ell try and catch some that are fresh this tlme." It is difï¬cult to tell how much men are conciliated by a kind manner and gentle speechâ€"Cicero. A man’s shoes are considered clean when they are black. The same is not true of his face. A dancing man may, if he likes, use his partner for a chair. Man proposes. andâ€"woman wishes he wouldn’t be such a plaguey long time about; it. When a. handsome girl comes out her papa. has to come downg handsomely. The devil never has much trouble with people who get rich in a hurry. It; lsn ’t always the best man who gets the biggest gravestone. A warm bath is always grateful to a sick child. The water should fully cover the person and feel pleasantly warm to the hand. As the little patient is lifted out. wrap it in a warm blanket and dry it under that with a warm towel. Put on a. flannel night-dress or jacket over the cotton night-gown. If the attack is the beginning of an eruptive disease the bath will help to bring the eruption to the sur- face. An ailing child should not be al- lOWed to sleep in the room with other children. A delicious way of cooking ï¬nnan had- docks is to cook them on a “toaster†be- fore a clear ï¬re, or else in the oven, bast- ing the ï¬sh in both cases with two or three ounces of butter broken into pieces from eight to ten minutes should cook them enough. Make an egg sauce dissolv- ing half a cup of butter in n pan, stir in two ï¬neiy-chopped hard-boiled eggs, dish the haddocks on a hot dish, add any butter they were cocked in to the egg sauce, and pour all over the dish. Hard-boiled egg sandwiches are much improved by the addition of a. little water- cress, lettuce, or endive. Beetroot, water- cress, celery, tomatoes and mustard and cress make delicious sandwiches or port- able salads. These are specially to be recommended to travellers, who,'-; when tired of meat sandwiches (which, however daintily prepared, sometimes prove mono- tonous eating in a railway carriage,) will ï¬nd the vegetables most refreshing and appetising. When boiling mutton don’t forget to make some good Scotch broth from the rich broth remaining in the kettle after taking the mutton out. Or if you boil or roast the mutton done brown, remove some of the broth while the mutton is cooking. In Scotland during the early part of the 14th century a man could live sumptu- ously on Sixpence a day; and with the addition of other three pennies could also keep a man-servant to attend him con- stantly. Pimples indicate a. bad condition of the blood, and the proper cure is to use such medicines and eat such food as will eliminate the diseased matter from the blood. Sufferers from neuralgia are warned by a. medical writer not: to drink tea, but to drink {reely of coffee into which the juiCe of a lemon has been squeezed. Old pots and kettles that have become stained or have an odour may be immers- ed in suds and boiled, when they will come out as good as new. Ordinary sticking-plaster makes a. good remedy for corns, as it keeps them soft: and prevents the rubbing. An infant grows eight inches during the ï¬rst year. Only one. couple in 11,500 live to cele- brate their diamond wedding. WIT AND WISDOM. DOMESTIC HINTS. SAL‘V'ATION ARMY, Peel ST. ST. BAPTIST, Cambridge Streetâ€"Rev. W. K. Anderson Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Prayer Meetin Sab- ath morning at 10.30 A. M. Sa bath School at 2.30 P. M. Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor Monday at 7.30 P. M. Prayer Meeting Wednes- day at 7.30 P. M.â€"All seats free. METHODIST, Queen Street.â€"Rev. Newton Hill, Pastor. Services at 11.00 A. M. and 7.003. M. _S§.bbath School at 2.30 METHODIST, Cambridge St.â€"Rev. T. M, Campbell. Pastor. Services at 11 A.M.. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School and Bible Class at 2.30, Classes at 10 A.M. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday at 8 P. M. Young People’s Christian Endeavor Society. everv Friday evening at 7.30. There was a brisk time at a farm in Forfarshire the other day, when the farmer’s w1fe presented her lord with a new son, the cow had a calf, the mare a foal, and the cat supplemented the list with a healthy crowd of kittens. The farmer, poor man, was as busy during the proceedings as a cow's tail at ï¬ytime. A gentleman lately dismissed a clever but: dishonest gardener. For the sake of his wife and his family he gave him a character, and this is how he worded it:â€" “I hereby certify that A. B. has .been my gardener for over two years, and that dur- ing that time he has got more out of my garden than any man I ever employed." For thirty years we have noticed close- ly that those farmers who turn on [0 their pastures latest in the entire season. Not only that, but their pastures always pro- duce a great deal the most feed. Some one asserts that the best floor for horses is made of a mlxture of clay and coal ashes well beaten until it; is ï¬rm and solid, and then ï¬lled with boiling hot tar. In stormy weather, when the hens can- not; get out of the houses much. the floor should be littered with straw or leaves, and a. feed of dry grain scattered among the litter so as to make the scratch for it. There is not a very encouraging out- look in the butter-trade. The price is unusually low for so early 3. season of the year. Oats, neas and barley ground and mixâ€" ed togecher make a ration that is hard to beat for stock of all kinds, cows and hours especially. The Ontario Government crop report, just issued,states that the present oondxtion points to a ï¬rst-class crop of fall wheat Young fowls are the best for laying eggs. It is not good to keep hens beyond the second year, except as breeders. It is claimed that 75 per cent. of the damaged 'butter can be traced to ï¬lthy habits of the surroundings. One of the most important requxsites In keeping mttle for proï¬t is to keep the right kind of cattle. Of the 25,885 farms in Oregon 3,160 are provided with facilities for irrigation. A good clover sod turned under ï¬ts the ground to almost any other crop. think you can steer,†said the young man as he took the oars. “I guess that: won ’t be hard to do, †responded the young heiress. “I’ve often heard mamma. say she crossed the ocean in the steerage.†The Rev. Mr. Morrison. of Foula, who has been preaching in the North of Scot- land, tells that on one occasion when a. southerner was commiserating a native of Foula on being; shut out from news from London during several months of the year. he was met with the naive reply, “Ou, ay, I winder hoo the Londoners get: on without; hearing 0’ Foula.†“How do you manage your husband so completely?†asked a. friend of a lady a day or two ago. “ Why, my dear,†answered Mrs. B., “I adopt what I call the soothing plan. I never contradict him. For instance every day he says to me, ‘I suppose you think I am an old fool;’ and, my dear, I never contradict him !†Geordie was a noted character up Cairnie way. On one occasion he and the lady of his love were sitting on a style when they espied their master coming along the road. “Oh,†said the fair one, “far will we gang, Geordie?†“Nae wye.†replied Geordie. “ Lat’s steek oor een and he’ll never see’s.†v__-‘ --..m;, .Lccx DblCCUuâ€"Llu [am Moore and Lieut. Parkin, o cers. Sunday services at 7 and 11 A.M., and 3and 7.30 P.M. Public meeting with the exception of Tuesday, soldiers roll- call; and Friday, Holiness meetmg to which all Christians are welcome. .............. I ‘muuuul UUL UUU â€"Rev. Vicar-G eneral Laurent, Pastor, Rev. Father, McCaul, Curate. Services at 8.00 and 10.30 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 3.30 P. M. M. C, A., Rooms Cor. Kent and Cam- bridge sts. Open daily from 9.00 A. M. to 10.00 P. M. Prayer Praise meeting Saturday at 8 P. M. Young men’s meeting Sunday at 4.15 P. M. Short addresses. Good singing. Young men always welcome. Dr. W. H. Clarke, President; C. K. Calhoun Gen. Secre-I tarv. PAUL’S (Church of England) Russell Streetâ€"Rev. C. H. Marsh, Rector. Ser- vices at 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath Schod’l at: 2.30. Prayer Meet- ing: Wednesday at; 7.30 P. M. MARY’S (Roman Catholic) Russel Street h__ 1?. n v“--vvu \/.vv .1 n M. 'Young Pegplés Chrigï¬iia‘; Circle Sabbath Morning at 10.15 ANDREW’S (Presbyterian). William Street. Rev. Robert Johnston, B. A., Pastor. Services at. 11.00 A. M. and 7.00 P. M. Sabbath School at 3.00 P. M. Prayer Meeting )Yedrlesday at 8:00 P. s†xr-.-..~ h, P. M. Prayer Mééï¬ï¬ 7.30 P. M. r. ‘râ€"VV- “‘1 _.vv I: Thursday at; FARM AND GARDEN. The Churches. Rooms Cor. Kent and Cam- Open daily from 9.00 A. M. M. Prayer Praise meeting at ‘8 P. M: _ _Young men’s sweetâ€"Captain 1351 and 1853 Notre Dame Street, The ï¬rmly established sufï¬cient guarantee that 01 and that stabilitv and 0mm! 1. men new passenger elevator w but also a luxury 1n its w ats of show rooms. ' “ n .1 ' nt 111 be found not only a great cm £11ij ay 1‘0 Carry their customers to any of the! meets the eye, such as 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 piece parlor suites. Odd pie. suites, gilt chairs, corner chairs, ottomans, divans, tete-a-tetes. piano‘ d p . _ L ; foot-stools in plushes, brocatelles and silk damasks of all the new In say, APT11 :3“ 1‘ and latest shades; also a full line of fancy centre, card and work-tab‘ statuette-stands, ladies writing desks, music stands and easels. On the third floor a ï¬ne selection of Rocking, Easy and Recli ' Chairs claims particular attention. The celebrated bent wood f ture imported from Vienna, Austria, and of which the Messrs. McG vey make a specialty, also occupies a prominent position on this floor. On the fourth floor bedroom sets in profusion are to be found if :the cheap ash wood to the elegantly carved set valued at ï¬fteen hr: dred dollars. Brass and iron furniture, of which they have jus lY nOticeable feature; handsome solid brass bedsteads and pretty-60' for Children from $30 up 1'0 $125â€"there they are of the ne\\'e.<tdc.~‘1gn~‘ neat iron bedsteads as low as $5, and rising to much higher ï¬gures!" also be found here. A great advantage in this house is that the pH 0f GVCI‘V piece of lurniture and article is marked in plain figures. 1?: owing to the widening of Notre Dame street west, which will nece5> tate their removal next spring, they are now Offering special induct ments in the way of Discounts off the marked prices. The Cilill‘Cv tablishment is a model one, neatness and order prevailing everywher: all available Space is taken UP to accommodate the enhrmous stGC which they carry, and from which purchasers can select at their 11'me ‘Their new passenger elevator will hp fmma .m+ m1... n .irrmr pm-nnicnc‘ Library Tables, Writing Desks. and Easy and Combinatio: all descriptions. ' On reaching the second floor a beautiful assortment of On entering the well-known and Dame street. the visitor is struck bv t? No one need despair; the millionnaire can furnish his house 1 top to bottom with the ï¬nest and most costly, and his junior clerk ï¬ll his little tenement with useful and pretty articles at prices to his more limited means. A walk through those spacious show rooms :5 a revelation: in fa; they really amount in themselves to a Montreal Industrial exhibitionj their line. Such must necessarily be the reflections of anyone \x-h pays a visit to this ï¬rm’s prominent establishment and mikes atour nspection through their attractive warerooms. Everything 1n the furniture line 15 to be found there, from ï¬ve cent chair to a ï¬fteen hundred dollar bedroom set, and suit everyone. Art in the household and beauty in the ordinary surroundings life was the gospel propounded by the late Professor Ruskin and 0th elevators of the human mind, and to realize what 1"ro:_1'ess has be made in this direction it is well worth while paying a visit to the m; niï¬eent show rooms of the old established furniture house of Messrg‘ OWEN MCGARVEY So 1849-1853 Notre Dame Street. MONTREAL- @éTHE MARCH 0F IMPROVEMENT. Search the W of the County A Sideboard for $4.50. a Bureau for $4, a Bedstead for $22 Mattras's and SpIings for $5. Common Chairs, Hall Fumi; etc., very low. We are making a special drive in Mattrasses. Sideboards, Dining Tables, Hall Stands, Bookcases, Wardro nowadays compared with the outlay that would have be necessary a few years ago. Well-made Furniture was new:I cheaper in price than it is to-davâ€"with us. at least. It’s a well recognized fact that daily surroundings have mneh to moulding of character. If the home be neatly furnished the chances are that the good man will come home early 0’ nights and that the children will grow up reï¬ned and gentle. WE WILL GIVE YOU A Handsome Parlor Suite {car $3 ANDERSON, N UGEN T CO. Furniture Dealers and Manufacturers, near the Market YOUR HOMES CAN BE FURNISHED GHEAPLY A Bed-room Suite for $11, :ring the well-known and extensive warerooms on N ‘, the visitor is struck bv the excellent display of You will ï¬nd our Furniture rgputation of this well-known cgrner of Mcdiill street \â€" IVLAJ. Up DUIU 6L Ll] asy and Combination ChaiIS'é'and prices and be co and prices LA ouse i5 :Bprin Hound in this part of t Li: is scarcely necessary hanship in the constru lflywill not keep on ha} l W 1th the use of dian 1 'AIRING ATT Cannot be beaten for ‘ We will be sold at th‘ Its surprising the v: ‘xequal to what former] a specialty of, buying ‘ M WAGON Shippers say your reputations : old country mark would be hundrec would attend to t] N ow that th many alticles of I Engl‘sh dealers. Canadian Butter For some ye Dairy Saltâ€"A5111 courge, than the g in “the end. The grades. but it wou is spring. CARRIAG .es, Buggie \TOR has ready