vemtilo with do-r 5' voice Familiar and thy be dust." 'er to hi:- 'You told [Muscat 15S lco of wearers. took the mane: ran «ham: and ’whose hand at would act as his nvoy again said ;‘ the challenged p far better [off the nose, {jet in India .V of their LSCiDaIiDL'.‘ O 0111 y to leap t the ï¬sh thus cap- ployed by title. Leribed as LS its ï¬rst in u .er 4 9w» I: or see with r happens to me win nev- ' the beauty )r It is kept se. in which shape. But fl“; 3120 H 15:11.“! for some we are _nd thou. .11 speak of ï¬shing the strait lets down screen of 3.50 Governor‘ na e- W 0rd m1. on 01 1 the '0: Fed ark SOPRHO. Teacher of Piano and Voice Culture. Pupils Prepared for College Vows Tented Free. ‘ Keys Maniso‘n Matte at the best quality at mat- etial. [very Range Guaranteed. Miss Mabel B. Winters Steel Range *> 3? CASH AND ONE PRICE ï¬rseemévmawvmawmmwaz 33 reagentâ€! 2°C 0 4O ’LOUGHLINE McINTYREE Stores up the waste material thrown off by the blood. Dur- ing the long winter when the liver becomes torpid through long inactivity, this waste mat- ter is thrown back into the blood. 9geeeeeeeeeeeseeeeseeegeeeeewmm MODISH GOODS? J. G. Stomach and Liver Tonic The best medium for Advertisers. Covers Lindsay a. n d Surrounding District. we: For Spring and Summer Wear at Volume X LI X Men will ï¬nd a guarantee of good faith in their dealing with us, on account of the reliable goods we place belore them. Everything that is needed is here and everyone’s case receives prompt attention Our Clothing Department is well stocked with the latest and most fashionable goods in the market. 0111' Ordered Clothing is giving the best of satisfaction because the work done is thorough, and the material choice. Full range of selfâ€" colored Figured Silks for Shirt \\ aist Suits. All patterns at 50¢ a yard. In Spring Suitings mohairs take the lead, these come in all styles, from 35c to $1.25 per yard. Tweeds in light colors, plain greys and in- distinct plaids; homespun is their nature; very dressy and serviceableâ€"prices 85c and $1.00. ' We have been showlng some handsome Lin- ens with embroideries to match, also the lustre embroidery for hand-work. Eyelet or punch- work and blind embroidery are popular forms of decoration for Linen Suitings this season. More than ever to the fore are Linens for suitings, waists and entire costumes. White Linens are to be worn from the parasol ; he hoe Everything Linen. Now a. word about this important branch of our business. ééfa eéé ééé MEN’S CLOTHING. 'Hon. President â€" Rt. Hon. Lord :Strsthoona. Mount Royal, G.C.I.G. Dopodtl taken of .1 3nd tap-ard- futon-t at cut-rant rs,“ uldod Penalon Falls is not opon {_or g (a Yin-President and annual Hun- gerâ€"E. 8. Clouston. Proudontâ€"Sir Geo. A. Drummond, me-¢â€Â¢~s‘â€sw Bank of Montreal' ï¬ Suing- Bantu We have purchased a large : quantity of rural school de- l bentures on school districts ‘ in the Province of Sask- l atchewan and Alberta. The ‘ Districts contain from 10,000 i to 15,000 acres each and the : debentures run from $500 to 3 $1500, not more than 10 ‘ cents an acre on the land in Q the District. The legality and regularity of each issue g is guaranteed by the Provin- : cial Government. We will sell ' these debentures separately 0 to yield the purchaser 4g per cent interest and will collect the Coupons for principal g 0 0 g 0 0 O O 0 § 0 E P P P P p E and interest free of of charo-e. “~s~‘ms~‘“~~“~â€. Ir““§““ 4-1 22:. Interest Free of all Ex- pense in D“‘.‘vm‘ Victoria Loan 3 Savings Co. § mutate extreme cold. Capital $14,400,000 Rest $10,000,000 . nnflnl ESTABLISHED 1817. I beam'mdehableeitto resist Undoubted Security. SEPPS’S An admirable £994, with all its iaTural’ 'qualitiés 15m 7†This excellent Cocoa. main- tuna the- sysizqm In. “>th COCOA The Canada Paint Go. Also a full line of Dominion Pianos and Organs and a. few second-hand instruments of diflerent makes. All the latest popular music as well as the standard compositions always in stock. Having made arrangements with The R. S. WILLIAMS 1: SONS COMPANY, of Toronto, to give free tuition by mail from U. S. School of Music, New York, on all Violins, Banjos, Guitars, Mandolins, etc., purchased from me. I can therefore save you all teachers’ fees and secure for you the services of the very best professors of music obtainable. A Free Musical Education ! Prism Brand Prescription Drugg’ist, LINDSAY. L A. MURPHY, th. B (fNIRAl MUSIC SWRE DY=0=LA We have arranged a system of banking suitable for farmers accounts [and will be pleased to explain it to any of our progressive farmers. There is no reason why' a farmer [should not enjoy the beneï¬ts and [convenience of a bank account as inell' as our business men. Their cheques would be accepted in bus- iness transactions just the same as merchants. I am certain farmers will ï¬nd it a great convenience. An afternoon call would be the most convenient. H. J. LYTLE W. H. ROENIGK. Bandmaster Sylvester Band. FARMERS’ BANKING. THE ONTARIO BANK Lindsay, Feb. 10. 1906. age, wHich is guaranteéd to give satisfaction. Sold by Does not color the hands like other ‘!X°§' _Get a. 100 pock- IT HAS NO EQUAL. IT IS EASY TO USE. The (me Eackage will color cotton, Si] or wool or any fabric a. rich standing color. A dye which has proven the §_t:rongest and_ most _g‘pliahle. LINDSAY, ONT., THURSDAY, MARCH 22nd, 1906 and Economical. 1â€"1. “Perhaps. not." was the reply. "“But. they cost has to raise and they If: ye worth more mom-to us." we have had to do has been to turn the cattle out on the prairie and let them grow into‘ gold. The climate is such that they can feed out of dOurs all the year round. and th.‘ grass fattens them almost as well as grain. I am now shipping t9 ' Harp ml stock which have never tasted u-m. They am grass ‘legl and their lush is hard enough to standâ€tho'voyuge." "No! as well u (rain-ted (-u Pk?" "There has never been such a coun- try for money making as this. A" Pat Burns came to Calgary from 'Kirkï¬eld about. _ twenty-ï¬ve years ago, and began life by. plowing up the prairie at so much per acre. He turned his savings into cattle, and let them graze on government lands. As he made more money he bought more cattle, and to make a. long story short he is now a millionaire and is growing richer and richer. It was in his ofï¬ce in Calgary that I chatted with this man on cattle raising. He said : of Calgary. He is the Armour of this part of the world, and is some- times called tlfe cattle king of the British Northwest. He shipped 3,500 car-loads of beeves last year, and he has now about 20,000 head in- his yards. He has a big trade with Manitoba, British Columbia and Al- aska. At the beginning of the Klon- dike gold discovery he got 31, 000 apiece at Dawson for steers, and as much as a dollar a pound for beef on the hoof. r Most of the stock raised here is well bred. One thousand dollars is by no means a high price for a bull, and there are cattle sales at Calgary every year which compare favorably with any in the United Statzs. The favorite animal is the Shorthorn. ‘ but there are many Polled Angus and Galloways. The best breeding stock comes from England. and‘ there are some ranchmen who make a spe-1 cialty of raising choice beef for the English market. The Canada Cattle company. which has forty thousand head on its difl'erent ranches, ships its stock on the hoof to England. The animals are all grass fed, and the sanitary regulations are such that they must be killed within eight days after landing in Great Britain. Sir William Van Horn has a big {arm in Western Canada which is noted for its ï¬ne cattle. and there are many rich farmers in Manitoba. Right in the heart of, the wheat belt Thomas Greenaway, a former prem- ier of that province. has a farm of tWo thousand acres. but he plants only one-half of this in grain, and devotes the balance to raising high- lyâ€"bred Shorthorns. He has now two hundred, and says they are the most profitable part of his farming A operations. THE ARMOUR OF CANADA. One of ti? best known ranching men of the Wait is Patrick C. Burns. 1‘ Our own cattle country has lwcn greatly overstocked. The grasses have been so cut 0!! that they will not came up and our agricultural de- partment is encouraging re-seeding the plains. Herein Canada, every- thing is under rigid government sup- ervision. The mounted police patrol ‘the ranches: They enforce, the pro- tection of the cattle against diseases and have dinning stations where all‘ the stock that comes into the coun» try is examined and treated to pre-‘ vent the introduction of Texas fever and other plagues. These police have surgeons with them and they watch carefully all cattle from the United States. ing area is biggt-r than 'l‘cxaq, and gsome describe it as equal to six states as large as Pennsylvania. The most of this country is now let out on Government lenses. The annual rent is {our cents an m-ro, but. the grass is so thin that it takes twenty acres to feed one head of stock, and the government will not. permit more than an average number to be grazed on any of the ranches. THE GREAT CANADIAN RANGE. II These stockmen claim to have more; a" grazing lands than we have. 1 havezmis‘, traveled for hundreds of miles L‘aï¬tf‘()0 I and north of‘Cal-gary through a rich; ““- prairie country covered with grass,;we and I am told such lands run south 'Much to the United States line. The (.‘an-fm- “.1 adians say that. their posxi‘hlc ranch- 5 when ‘10 England. Just north of thisâ€" rv- gion there is a dairy country whor» they are establishing creamcries with government assistance. and where they expect to raise butter and chvese for British Columbia and the Orient. Calgary is the capital of the cow- boy country of the wild Canadian West. What was once known as 'the Great American Desert extends 1‘er Montana north into Canada. It com- prises a regionrmone than twice as large as Ohio. running from the Rocky Mountains eastward, devoted to grating. The land though semi- arid is covered with the richest of grasses and it is now supporting ‘hundreds of thousands oi catlJL-A ‘horses, sheep and hogs. According} to the last census there were a mil-l lion cattle in Manitoba and the| Northwest. 3 little more than a third? that many horses. and about four hundred thousand hogs and sheep.; Largo. herds are now brought from Texas here to be fed and more than} forty thousand beevcs were shippedi on the hoof last year from Calgary, A chat with Pat Bums, the Cattle Kingâ€"Wheat-fed Beef and Barleyâ€"flow Blooded Horses are rearedâ€"A visit to a Horse Ranchâ€"Stock Men versus Farmers RAISING FINE HORSES AND CATTLE IN THE NORTH WEST A LAND OF FINE STOCK. W7 Wm ,. 9“ get {or n The ranch buildings hora consist of a dwelling worth perhaps about $2,000, a barn the size of a country livery stable and a. number 0! cor- rals. The horses live on the prairies and the buildings are comparatively cheap. The owner of this ranch, al- though he is worth hnl! a million dollars, lives as simply as the ordin- ary store clerk of 01131)! our citiés. His house here is oom!ortnble, but not. pretentious, and during our call his wife “apologiud for her appear- ance, saying that. she had jusc come1 from superintendin‘ the dressing 0! some-hop which lad boon izmod tint moral“. She chatted freely about her much me. saying that the pre- term it mug," mum. at San mu wherein- girlhood on spént. \A VISIT TO A HORSE RANCH. I drove out over the prairie yester- day to the Robinson horse ranch. This is devoted to rearing Clydesâ€" dales and Shires for the market of British Columbia. and eastern Can- ada. Them horses are in great de- mand in the mining regions, some of them going as far north as Alaska. Leaving Calgary, we drove for sever- al hours over a rolling prairie cov- ered with a thick grass. now .eured into hay. It is bowu on top but green near the roots. The horses feed on such grass all the year round. They are pastured in the midst of the winter, even when the ground is covered with snow. They paw the snow away with their feet. and. as the cowboys tell me, come on} hog-13 in the spring. : â€Yes. we get most of our pork: from Chicago. and we are also buy-‘ ing veal to ï¬ll out our shipments to, ‘ England. All your meat that comes! I here pays a tariff of 2 cents a: pound, but even at that your pack-.I ing arrangements are on such1a vasti ; scale that you have so far been able ’ ; to undersell us. We are also import-I ing poultry into eastern Canada from the United States. I brought in twenty-ï¬ve carloads ol- turkeysl' last. Christmas. Eventually we will raise these things ourselves. and we will be shipping fowls direct to England." 1‘ . l RAISING BLOODED HORSES. I1 One of the large stock businessesfl here is horse raising. I saw thous- 1 ands of horses feeding on the prair- ies between here and Medicine Hat, 1 and passed large herds on my way a north to Edmonton. The horses are l ï¬ne looking. The day of the bron- f cho and the broncho buster have is passed, and the animals new breed- ing are handled by the stockmen, so that they are comparatively tame when ready to break. Nearly all the best known horses are represented. ‘There are Clydes from Scotland. thoroughbred Shires from Euz‘lnml au’l Percherons from France. So c... o! the ranchers are raising trottingr stock, and (ALOPSJJNR saddlers ion our city markets: Robin Adair, which recently took the ï¬rst prize at the New York horse show, was reared just outside of Calgary, and near by there is a stockman who has 1,200 Percheron mare. There are stallion shows here every year, and they compare with the cattle shows in quality. â€(‘66 2:35: C 2322-. I "‘Bark-y is another feed that makes good pork." continued Mr. Burns. “It grows well in Canada. and it will to a large extent take the place that. com does in the United States. Our barley-{ed hogs will bring sever- al cents more per pound than your corn-fed hogs. I expect to see a bar- ley-pork packing center grow up “Does Canada. buy much of our meat ?" 1 1 "But “hat kind of feed can vouJ “We have little trouble as to lraiso for fattening stock? \ou arc‘that " replied the horse rancher. “I :too far north for corn. " f'haux one boy “ho has broken more 1 " “e don' t expect to raise corn. than a thousand horms. ‘5» ï¬rst 'gvet 1We ha\a wheat, oats and barlm. them used to the. halter. 'lhis is a IMuch of the best meat is now made matter of a couple of hours. After :01‘ “heat. The serm-nings anl rough that we hitth up tach animal with‘a :«heat are saved {or food and H111 quiet old stager and drive the team ;catt!e graze on the stubble. When about fox 8. da\ or so. Later still Ewheat is low it is more proï¬table to We harness the horse up with anoth- Iced it than sell it. I km)“ :1 1111-11 or home of the same age uth “0 “ho recentlv tried the exp-3151mm! 111 me training. We put on the brakes fattening hogs with wheat. He had; and let the colts go as fast as thev sixteen and he led them .111 11).“ 1: ’please. holding tight to the reins. that cost 70 cans a bushel llu Z'The pulling of the wagon Soon ti1es hogs {attencd so easily. 111.. .. l11s them out and in a short time they wheat. turned into pork, netted Hm Fare ready for general uso. " s] .25 a bushel. “'heat at .10 ‘ CD‘S ' S“)CKMF\. \- s rrIIE FARMI’RQ a bushel will brin far mor ork " ’ " or be! than at thge elevator? in p‘ I I ï¬nd someuhat the same iriction “Yes, that will be the case with ranching pure and simple, although stock raising will increase. It, now takes ten acres of wild grass to sup- port. one steer ; on the farms the same land will suppm‘t. ton. We have now about 150,000 cattle in this vicinity. We shall eventually have 1,500,000." "But will an the stock business now fall of! ? 1‘ understand that the ranches are being out up into forms." " "I have shipped-many which have averaged one ton each. and we m-ll hundreds which will weigh 1.600 pound. Such beasts are entirely grass rod." “Seventy-ï¬ve or eighty (10118ng It costs just, about 830 to get it there, {or we must. send it 2.000 miles by rail and then across the Atlantic ocean. The people who handle such cattle expect to make 87 or $8 a head." ‘ ‘How much do weigh ‘2' ' "What will it sell {or in-la'wr- pool ‘2" WHEA T-FED BEEF Ir. WK such animals surpassed for teething troubles. breaking up colds, mducing fevers. Thirty days hath Septembor. and other ills. and M make a child Every person can remember : sleep naturally. I now always keep But to know when Easter's come them in the house." Ask for they Puzzles even scholars some. Tabla" at your druggist or you can get than by mail from The Dr.. Wil- When March the twenty-ï¬rst in past, Hana' chicina 00., Brockvine,pm.. Just watch the silvery moon, at 25 cent. a box. And when you see it fun and round ' Know Eastern be here soon. Nowadays wise mothers do not dose their children with harsh, griping lcastor oil or purgpttvcs. nor do they \give them poisonous opiates in the ‘form of so-caJled soothing medicines. Baby’s Own Tablets take We place «i these harsh and dangerous medicines. and the mother has the word of a Government anal'yst that the Tablets are absolutely safe. Baby's Own Tablets cure indigestion, constipa- tion. colic, teething, troubles, diarr- hoec. simple levers and other little ills 0! childhood. An occasional nose will keep children well. In. R. B. Low. Peachhnd. B. C.. says: “1; haw found Ruby's Own Tablets un-l The system of mount 2d police which, prevails throughout “-ustem Canada results in good “rd-er lwmg everywhere kept. The farmers un- regulm-Iy visited and cattle 1hi0ves are vigorously punished. Imlmerl, Ibo general order in both town and country is superior to that of the western parts of the United States. THE CANADIAN COWBOY. I would say, however, that the Canadian cowboy is far more orderly than his American brother. He lacks the picturesqumcss of our: frontiers- men and he never dashes into the settlements to shootâ€"up the mwns. Thercupon the Chicago man went back to his ranch. A few days later his hands were made temporary mem- bers of the mounted police, and from that time on he had no further trouble. "I think that we can protect you,†replied the chief. "I will send you an ofï¬cer and he will swear in your hired men as members of our police force. After‘ that they can arrest any one who dares touch your fences or destmy your crop. If the intrud- ers resist arrest and‘ your men shoot them in carrying out their duties that act will be perfectly legal." "I have come to see if m) rightsi cannot be protected. I am not a! Canadian citizen, but I am an Am-? erican who has bought. property In Canada. I have a. clear title «f my' farm, but your stock men say that I! shall not till it and they haxe cut! my fences again and again.†The cattle men also object to the (arms which are growing up in the .stock country. Within the past, few lyears it has been found that almost all. 0! these semiarid lands will ,rai‘se winter wheat. and a large part *of such lands are being turned into (arms. I met here at Calgary 3 iChicago man who had fenced in a thousand acres. He had bought this tract in the heart of a rich grazing country and was about to raise win- ter wheat. The stock men “ennui. him to leave and cut his fences.) After they had done this several} times he called upon the head of thei I mounted police, Colonel Saunders“ and said : I ï¬nd somewhat the same irictiuni betWeen the cattle men and sheep; men here as in the United States; The government regulates where the: sheep ranches are to be and the res, salt is that there are fewer sheep; than cattle or horses. - i ‘~â€"--mu no I,"V IUD “llllll'l’g' “Twiy are chiefly Clydesdale; I; its submisswe and symy: like them better than the Perchorons. tlpnï¬sn That y'l‘hvir limbs are clnancr and they are thing. better for oneral u ose horses." ' "How arg thev b50311 1’" HUMILXTY AND 11?. "We have little trouble as tol He is not in paradoxica that," roplied the horse rancher. “I f with Himself. at one u have one boy who has broken mart-ghumble, and at another than a thousand horms. We ï¬rst 'gm 3 us by personal aggres them used to the halter. This is a‘the two contradictory is the matter of a couple of hours. After and, fuse. and pass into ( that we hitch up each animal with'a We Somehow become aw; quiet old stagt‘r and drive the teamfhumility through the about for a day or so. Later still,“~hjch Hp makm m a “m. _..__- â€hm-v ------ --v--- vu-a vu-umw-euua uwu vcaus gnnsl '1 Why is l have about 300 4.3'ear-old animafs 1 there now no incongruity felt between which will weigh 1.500 apiece. Those: the Man who speaks and the word horses will bring $400 a» pair, andlspoken ? .- they are far easier to raise than the]: For, somehow, this Man who thuroug‘hbrods and require less Iron-.speaks_ retains. even as He makes ble to train than] {or the market. ithis agnosgivn .ma ...,.m-.‘-a,...- “u “\flwat breeds are your draft an- imals 1’" - [horses up mto droves or about titty: 'l‘horn is nothing which so striking. .pach, and give every hord a stunh‘ll. ‘15- winwase-s to the ,unique personali- {keeping the droves gwparated for 1‘»\'Uit-\‘ of Jesus than the universal ac- Ior three \meks to allow them In ik";(-eptanc:r of words from His lips, iconic acquainted with Pat'h "â€1“"- i which wuuld be incmiihle and into!- j'l'he animals are then dri‘vun tpp‘ethmherable from anyone else. «'1 am the i in one. herd and they PHHIH‘" â€' 00f?"1goorl. the perfect Shepherd." Who is man. Every stalhon. “WWW" “3†5 he that is going to say that' of himâ€" jtake care 01' his 0““ "13"“ H" “"P ' self 1’ It is gbsolutoly impossible not allow any of the others -o!. 1115’ to imagine any other man taking sex to come near thvrn and “'1†“EM 3 the words on his lips without wreck- for then: on the Slighll‘SI prOVOCa'ï¬ng his Character and our respect. tion.†{We should know that he has 1030 DRAFT HORSES PAY BEST. lbalance and perspective. His judge- "What breeds of horses are tbeJIfem, we should say, has betrayed most proï¬table 1,.- :hzm: there is something wrong. "We can make more money fr01119‘Yh3'. them, do we accept them so draft horses than from any others. hghtly from Jesus Chrifl? Why 53 I hnu'n 4;)".qu “(An A ..A.‘_ “1.1 -_:.‘--l..l‘|.»_- ,, , I "We formerly paid considerablc,atâ€" .tcntigm to breeding. limping tho lstock up for that purpose. Of late years we have turned the stallions {out with the horses and let all hus- gtle for thomselves. We dixide thv [homes up into droves of about 1ift_\ much. and glue even hord a. stulliun. {keeping- the droxos separated to! 1‘»\u Ior three weeks to alkm them to bo- come acquainted “uh each nthvr.‘ The animals are then dr i-wn together in one. herd and thm pusunv in con»; man. Every stallion. huwm-r “ill take care of his own man-s. Ho will not allow any of the others of hisf sex to comeO near thvm and will light 4 for them on the Slighllst proxoca-' tion.†1 the Elbow riv . and later on drive them to the foothills of the Rockivs, Whem we have anot her largo grazing territory. We ï¬nd it best to let the horses humle for themselvos. They come out stronger and are Worth more than grain-{ed stock. The Care of Children Father of love and goodnesa in Thy presence we ï¬nd rest and inspir- ation. The world is too much with lus, and early and late it absorbes our best energies and thought. May we on this one dav look heavenward and hear the music of the heavaxly host. Renew us in body. mind. and spirit. Give us once more the tend- er trust of childhood, so that we may feel that under us are the Everlastï¬ in; Arms and going helm-é us is a wise and kind Providence. Save us from being good only in theory. but rather in the home-and out In the world may we be as lights in dark- places, as strength to the weak. joy to the depressed. and a blessing to all around. Guide us into all good- ness. in all. ’ing ! Yet. still the words conveying this unparallelled assumption sound in our ears as charged with delicate and fascinating simplicity. Not a ting-3'0! egotism Can be felt in them. There is an utter absence of any- thing strained or forced. It is His complete meekness. His 'complete selflessness. His entire incapacity to bear record of Himself. that is over- whelmingly recognised in the very act of his self-presentation. "Come unto Me. I can do all. I am all 3’ So it is that here in my text all that is gracious, an that is humble. ’ali that is tenderly human. etill â€seems to be speaking in the very I words which stagger by their aston- ‘ ishing presumption. Never does the lowness of Jesus daw'n more clearly .01: our hearts than when He stands {before 'us saying: “I am the Good Shepherd ; I am the ideal, the per- ’fect Shepherd. There is no other Shepherd. AH who made such a {claim before Me were thieves and .‘robbers. The sheep woul’d not hear :them. For the Sheep are Mine and Mine alone. I know Mv sheep and ,Mine own know Me. 'I‘heV hear My 'voice. I am the true and the only :Shepherd. I am the good and noble 'Shepherd who 1335 down His life for the sheep." SOLACE FOR SORROW There is no sorrow for which He is not an adequate solace. There is. no hunger which He cannot satisfy With calm assurance far bmond all ques- tion or criticism, requiringr no Ivio denCe or argument, without a quiver of hesitation, or.a hint of anV'pc-s- sibie doubt, or surprise. or anxietv. He assumes Himself to be more than enough to'counterbalance the whole woe of the world. He can take it. all into Himself, and it will be satisï¬ed and interpreted and at peace. Amaz- After the moon has reached its full, Then Easter will be here. Thirty days hath September. Every person an remember : But, to know when Easter's come Puzzles even scholars some. .asethey shrew their garments before IHis very gentleness. and cry. “Hos- !annah .' Blessed is He that cometh." in is as Lord and Master that He is [among us as one that serveth. We irealize His'dominion, ox'er us through 'the very act. by which He Imeeis. girded, like a slave, with a towel. and washes the dirt from oun feet. [The two elements are inmparable. They melt into a. single exwession {â€"Jesus Christ. 'g uumme, and at another astounding {us by personal gg‘ression. Nay! ‘the two contradictory moods mix rand, fuse. and pass into one another. We Somehow become aware of His [humility through thca wry claims which He makes to a paramount and incomparable supremacy. In assert- ing His right to absolute authority EOWA- our lives. He appeals to us by [His simplicity and His meekness. Always the two conceptions mingle. 3Our King comes to us. meek. and riding upon his ass; it is His mak- :ness which evokes from man the re- ‘cognition of His Imperial Lordship For. somehow. this Man who speaks, retains. even as He makes this aggressive and tronwndous 0e!!- assertion. the character which so en- thrals us by its winning humility, by its submissiw,5 and sympathetic gen- tleness. That is the wonder-ltd thing. . . . . .‘ He 15 not 111 paradoxxcal collxsxon x., 14 BY THE REV C ANON HP‘NRY SCOTT HOLLAVD. "I am the Good Shepherd. ’â€"John .§§s‘ss¢â€â€˜ The Date for Easter HUMILI'I‘Y AND MEEKNESS THE WEEKLY SERMON The Perfect Shepherd Number 12 at one time tenderly Cimuhtion 4300 12.5% has