> % j Â¥ 4 gloryland. _ fae & wormmn~â€"@@@r mmz The man 'i: :;:ihveo that ut.l:‘:::t, is the cheapest to ca mhthnluï¬-d.:;o. The greatest pleasure next to secing wwn home hapy is secing someâ€" g#’-u-obm. And some of us, too, make utter shipâ€" wreck of our lives. Ignoring our Pilot‘s orders, and choosing our own course, we find ourselves stranded on the quickâ€" sands of despair; the present but an unsatisfving, aching void, the future a dread and grim uncertainty. But if we will take Him who on the bitter cross received the punishment due to us, as the sloping barriee of pebbles which guards the land from the onslaughts of the ocean, and the acattering waters and the windâ€"driven surf eddy and swirl in a very turimoil of confusion and uproar after each rebuff from the adamantine buttress, which all the might of their infuriate assaults fails to overmaster ; while a fieree hurricane lashes the tossâ€" ing ocean into a frenzied chaos of conâ€" tending waters. And now in the distance, but approachâ€" ing nearer and nearer, is observed a vesâ€" sel in distress driving helplessly before the blasts of the storm, her sails in ribâ€" bons, her topmasts torn away and vioâ€" lontly swinging to and fro, and the waters hurtling across her decks; while she herselt now plunges, bows forward, into the occan depths, or now climbs up on the breast of the rolling wave toâ€" our Saviour and our Guide, we shall be protected from real harm in this life, and then on angel wing be convoyed to the thrilling and startling joys of the A wild tempest is raging, and . the breakers on the great sandâ€"bank a few miles from the shore are lashed into foam. The curling whiteâ€"crested billows are hurled with the roar of thunder upon Whless Tnfrescs > 2 . E83 But those heroes of the sea, the lifeâ€" boat men, realizing the dire peril in which she stands, are launching their boat. About a dozen gallant and heroic men, grim and determined, but not daunted by the knowledge that perhaps the raging waves will claim them as their prey and will egulf them in their wild embrace, have now boarded her, and with a rush she takes to the waters, in a moment a towering wave breaking completely over her, succeeded by anâ€" other and another. Hoisting their small sail and rowing as if for their lives, they rapidly forge through the buffeting saurges, at length arriving close to the iated barque. _ The mariners, mostly lashed to the masts, are reseued, and the brave men pull for the shore, hapâ€" pily beaching their boat in safety. wards the clouds above. Rnd:ierlou, and whoily at the merey of the wrathful eleâ€" ments, she approaches ever nearer and yet nearer to the fatal deathâ€"trap of the seas, until at length she strikes the bank, her keel is embedded in the yieldâ€" every wave she quivers and trembles from stem to stern as though in mortal ing quicksands, and with the impact of terror and dread. *"O Lord, dear Lord, forgive me! How could 1 know it was Thee?t" My very soul was shamed and bowed In the depths of humility. And He said: ‘"‘The sin is pardoned, But the blessing is lost to thee; For, comforting not the least of Mine, Â¥e have failed to comfort Me." And siraight I turned to tolling To make my home more neat; 1 swept, and polished, and garnished, And decked it with blossoms sweet; I was troubled for fear the Master Might come ere my task was done, And 1 hastened and worked the faster, And watched the burrying sua. (By Mrs. Emma A. Lent.) They said: ‘‘The Master is coming To honer the town toâ€"day, And none can tell at whose house or home The Master will choose to stay.‘" And I thought, while my heart beat wildly, What if ie should come to mine? How would I strive to entertain And honor the Guest divine! Then the Mastor stood before mo, And his face was grave and fair:â€" **Three times toâ€"day I came to your door, And craved for pity and care; Three times you seat me onward, Unbelped and uncomforted, And the blessing you might have had was lost And your chance to serve had fled." But right in the midst of my duties A woman came to my door; She had come to tell me her sorrows, And my comfort and aid to implore And 1 said: °i cannot listen, Nor help you any toâ€"day; I bave greater things to attend to," And the pleader turned away. But soon there came anotherâ€" A eripple, thin, pale, and grayâ€" And said: "O, let me stop and rest Awhile in your home 1 pray! I have travoled far since morning, 1 am hungry and faint and weak; My heart is full of misery, And comfort and help 1 seek." At last the day was ended, And my toil was over and done:; My house was wopt and garnished, And I watched in the dusk alome Watched, but no footfall sounded, No one paused at my gate, No one entored my cottage door, I could only pray and wait. Jesus said: "Verily I say unto you, inasâ€" much as ye hbave done it unto one of the least of these brethren, ye have done it unto And I said: "I am grieved and sorry, But 1 caunot help you toâ€"day; I look for a great and noble Guest," And the cripple went away. And the day wore onward swiftly, And my task was nearly done, And the prayer was ever in my heart That the Master to me might come. And I said: "I am sorry for you; You are sorely in need of care, But 1 cannot stop to give it, You must hasten on elsewhere.‘" And at the words a shadow Swopt over his blueâ€"veined brow; *‘*Seme one will feed and clothe you, dear But I am too busy now." I waited till night had despened And the Master had not come; **Me has entered some other door," I cried ‘"And gladdened some other home!"‘ My labor had been for nothing And 1 bowed > aead and wept. My heart was sore with longing, Yet. spite of it all, I slept. And 1 thought I would spring to moet Him And serve Him with utmost care, When a litttls child stood by me, With a face so sweet and fairâ€" Sweet, with marks of tearâ€"drops, And his clothes woere tattered and old; A finger was bruised and bleeding, And bis liitle bare feet were cold. 2 ac> y (M*T\%f 2E SY * Rop The Master is Coming. Heroes of the Seas. (By a Banker.) Yiel® nnarr; AÂ¥Y R@NEL’; One of the most extraordinary proseâ€" cutions was that against a governess who was convicted of "lese majeste" tor having writtn\hor name in the visitors‘ book of an hotel immediately beneath the signatures of the King of Saxony and two princesses, Newspaper editors are frequent victims of the law in this connection. _ Two of them were once sentenced to four months‘ and nine months‘ imprisonment respectively ind to heavy fines for publishing an article which was held to suggest in some obâ€" scure way that the kaiser was afraid of his own subjects, and a third was convicted for having publshed a telegram trom a correspondent reporting the death of an alleged stepbrother of the kaiser. Om another occasion, when a newsnaâ€" reporting andJublishing of the spesch were prosecuted for "lese majeste." A German marine while in Kiel on leave had an argument with a comrade im a restaurant, and made use of an exâ€" pression which was held to have been inâ€" sulting to the kaiser. He was let off with eight months‘ imprisonment in conâ€" sideration of the fact that he was not quite sober at the time. A foreigner visiting Germany may fall within the seope of the absurd law, alâ€" though he cannot, of course, be imprisâ€" omed for its infraction, Two Americans ladies were, however, arrested, and <xâ€" led from the country for talking (in :;Iish) in a manner not flattering to the Emperor William. Perhaps, the most absurd case of all was one that did not end in a conviction; even German offiâ€" cialdom was not proof against the humor of the situation, _ When the health of the kaiser was being drunk at festiviâ€" ties in honor of his birthday at Scharâ€" ley, in Silecia, a nchoolbo',xv‘i'n the i::roml was observed to smile. public proâ€" secutor immediately set on foot an Ierion for "lese majeste," but the schoolboy miraculously escaped the consequences of If the culprit is a soldier his punishâ€" ment for "lese majeste" is exceesively severe. A private was drummed out of the army and sentenced to seven years‘ imprisonment for saying to a comrade that the kaiser might have slowed down the train in which he was trayelling in order to see the salute of the soidiers who were lining the route. Last year the innkeeper of Lichten â€" berg was sentenced to three months‘ imâ€" prisonment for a somewhat curious form of "lese majeste." It was alleged against him that in his conversations with his sustomers he used the (GGerman language in an unworthy fashion, and was not over nice in his expressions when talkâ€" ing to a police official,. He was a conâ€" sorvative, a member of a patriotic club, and had served in the army, but these profs of his unquestionable loyalty did not save him from dire punishment. W EmOSTEe? occasion, when a newspaâ€" per published an incorrect version of a speech made by the kaiser to his re â€" oruits, all the persons responsible for the reporting and PnPlishing of the spesch hio awful deed. The latest case occured a few days igo, when a Berlin butcher was sentâ€" meed to six months‘ imprisonment for r1aving spoken disrespectfully of the kaiâ€" er three years ago. Not long ago the mditor of a German newspaper received i sentence of three months for remarkâ€" ng in his journal that the kaiser reâ€" rwived £2,000 daily for appending his dAgnature to a few state documents. The law of "lese majeste" is no reapecâ€" wer of persons; schoolboys or old wo â€" men are equally visited with the full senalties, _ An old woman of seventyâ€" ‘hree, living in Dresden, was sentenced :o six months‘ imprisonment for remarkâ€" ng that the fate of King Alexander of Servia ought to befall King (George of Saxomy; and a baker‘s boy of fifteen in Filesia had three weeks‘ imprisonment ‘or insulting the majesty of the kaiser. If two persons are carrying on a conâ€" sersation alone in a private room, and me of them should make a remark disâ€" espectful to the kaiser, the other may lenounce him to the police, and he prot= ibly would be convicted and sentenced ‘o imprisonment. It will easily be unâ€" lerstood that under this law, and with he excessive zeal of the CGerman police »fficial, the authorities find plenty of work to do in the direction or securing :onvictions for this offense. In all monarchial countries it is an axâ€" om, accepted by everybody that the perâ€" on and character of the ruling soverâ€" ign are sacred, and even though the dea may rest upon nothing more tanâ€" wble than custom or an unwritten law. t is observed in most countries in a oyal spirit, Especially is this the case n England, where there could probably 10t be found a newspaper, however seurâ€" ilous, that would speak disrespectfulâ€" y of King Edward; and one might walk »bout in the public places and listen in ain for an expression of contempt or »gprobrium uttered against any member f the royal family. In Germany, on the other hand, where he laws regarding "lese majeste" are o strict, scarcely a week passes without he conviction of some unfortunate perâ€" on who has dared to infrings one of the cores of clauses in the law, and suffers .ccordingly. "Les majeste," suceinetly #f reference for the information of lawâ€" ers have been published on the intriâ€" ate subject. The law is so worded as to bring withâ€" n its scope any remark which can by he exercise of great ingenuity be twistâ€" «d into something reflecting, be it ever 0 remotely, on the character or person #f the sovereign, and to make it a riminal offense. The clauses have been 0o loosely worded that the widest possiâ€" »le interpretation may be placed on mny remark which fails under suspicâ€" on. "Lese majeste" can be committed 1y words or by actions, in private conâ€" rersations no less than in public speechâ€" s, and in personal and confidential letâ€" ers to friends or relations, as well as n newspaper articles or books. ccordingly. "Les majeste," succeinetly ‘efined, is the crime of uttering an inâ€" ult to the ruling monarch of tfe counâ€" ry. In the German statute book no ewer than 125 paragraphs are devoted 0 expounding the law, and 900 books It can be cultivated and QI!OJ!H‘. are enormons. â€" If interested write GINSENG us *or information. 1. E. YORX & CO., W aterford, Ont. A High Personage. For a fortnight, each May, the Generâ€" al Assembly of the Church of Scotland is in session at Edinburgh, in one of the great halis otf Holyrood Palace, under the presidency of a peer of the realm, holding a patent from the King as his Lord High Commissioner,. During that fortnight the Lord High Commissonier enjoys altogether viceregal honors,. He is received on his arrival in the Scotâ€" tish capital by its municipal dignitarâ€" ies, headed by the Lord Provost, and by the Lordâ€"Lieutenant of the country, and then, escorted by cavalry, drives in state cariages, with postillions, through streets lined with troops, to Holyrood Palace, where he is quartered during his two weeks‘ stay. }Aike the Viceroy of Ireland and the princes of the reigning house, he is addressed as "Sir"; and e is also accorded the predicate of "Your (Grace!" Not merely men, but ladies as woell, are expected to rise from their seats whon he enters a room and to reâ€" main standing until he bids them . be seated. He has a large staff of lords and gentlemenâ€"inâ€"waiting, while his wife has her maidsâ€"ofâ€"honor. Assessmentâ€"Land, $65,386,502; buildâ€" ©ieeuing P05 Cureu ings, $735,745,400; income, _ $8,838,786; â€"after Sufering business, $19,224,028; total, $169,106,316. Yeue ct Tax revenue, $3,0604,914. Total revenuc, | Mirscleâ€"days may be patâ€"but the day ef $4,471,971. anving people from suffering is ever â€"prescat. Annual post office receipts, $1,050,â€" W.mhhm&ï¬ 913. Pieo? Some say the only cure is the kaife. We _ _Number_ of buiiding permits issued uay, operations are unnececsery. â€" Read this luare in 1905, 3,738. " For years I had Piles, which protruded and biad Value of buildings erected in 1906, $10,â€" Auchy. _ The iiching poin was sometime cimeal wion en ies ons r : = remiden on 0 a ss;’nnslen of property in 1905, 7. mm / mied iies, but with poor sucessa, ' * This winter, in New Y:‘â€"-flb“hâ€" Average death rate, 17.46 per 1,000. 4 suffered greatly â€"was almost compelied to remaia Police stations, 7; signal boxes, 200; . ds my room. /t1atdsevera/remediaâ€"without »alicf. firemen, 208. " On my return home, Mire Oiniment was adviccd, Public Ubraries C@: numker af haonks _ J80it, in onlya short time, all the irritation and Tehigh Valley Railroad from Suspenâ€" sion Bridge, Friday, June 15th,. Ticktes good 15 days. Tickets good on regular express trains leaving at 3.50 and 7.15 a. m., 7.15 and 8.43 p. m For tickets, Pullmans and particulars, call on or adâ€" dress Robt. S. Lewis, Passenger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto, Ont. Minard‘s Liniment used by Physiciarms, Public libraries, 6; number of books, 535,000; tickets in use, 56,000, Street gas lamps, 964; electric arc lights, 1,.261. â€" > =_ Theatres, 5; churches, 254; hotels, 147 ; _ " HamsMon, Murch 9, 1906." _ ho;pitnls. 9. (Signedy Mork O Rourke, 186 Mess St. N. mproved streets, 100 miles; '-’ Prove‘:l‘:oTS miles ; i:oul, :.’: :ilel. higs h\“"..‘."“â€â€"’ Sewers, 240 _ miles; water pipe, 275 Mr. O‘tourke is the "'b'l hrasder of 7?2";- ‘2..1 mains, 287 miles; sklewalks, bull.tnisedep. &qâ€"-l'l*bw: 75 miles. Ointment brings quick eleb, Best annual exhibition in the world ; Nice flb"_nh area of grounds, 180 acres; length of w‘ Chafing, Bums and other ckin yauy ttand. 700 feet; seating capacity» o_ Si%." 506. a besâ€"6 lor $2.50 At dugzits‘ One of the finest City Halls an ecantin. _ ~If hom The Chemits® Co. of Canade, Limited Obtainable from _ all stores at 50 cents per from the Bilean Co., Toronto, upon, reeepit boxes for $2.50. * Bileans for Biliousness _ cure headâ€" ache, constipation, piles, liver trouble, indigestion and all digestive disorders, female ailments, skin eruptions, bilâ€" jousness, sick headache, bad taste in the mouth, foul breath, dizziness, fainting, buzzing noises in the head, feelings of uncomfortable fulness even after a light meal, wind _ pains, aneâ€" mia, debility, etc. ent. Cost, $2,500,000; total floor space. Maemitteaâ€"Tereate. 5.40 acres; tower, 300 feet high; largest _ Leod jor the trademarh= 2.40 acres; tower, 300 feet high; ia t leok for the trademariv winding clock on continent; bell ve'm i ing ll.lllm Fine ha for lake vessels; used durâ€" : , ing 19086 by 3.4N0 v~sacles, representing a > tounage of 1,400,000. MAAK ALGHDT no very great improvement, as imny friend ‘had foretold, but I persevered with them and soon began to feel an improvement. From that day I never looked back. _ Gradually the indigesâ€" tion, headache, dizziness, _ and other ailments were overcome. I took in all nine boxes of Bileans and they cured ma completely. Bileans are _ worth $10 a box, and I only _ wish I had known of them carlier. I am pleased to let other people know how I have benefited by them." "I was treated at Welbock Dispenâ€" sary, at St. George‘s Hoepital, at St. Mary‘s Hospital, Paddington, and at Croydon Hospital, but without reâ€" sult. _ We have spent pounds and pounds on doctors, but they never gave me any benefit. Sometimes I got relief for a day or two, but the pains soon returned. "I had no faith in proprietary mediâ€" cines, and had never takem ary, but I determined to follow his advice. For the first week of taking Bileans I felt others. I was subject to racking headâ€" aches, my head seemed to go round ard round, I ached all over, and every limb shook. Every time I ate or drank 1 had such a heavy feeling. and didn‘t want to do anything but lie down. if death had come to me then I should not have mindâ€" ed, and many a time I prayed that I might die. I was actually afraid to eat, and often I have lived for days at a time on nothing but bread and milk. "The doctors didn‘t seem to know what was the matter with me. One said one thing and another said someâ€" thing else; but in spite of all their medicine*I got no better. One day an insurance agent in Runcorn said that if I was suffering from indigestion I should take Bileans, which had cured him of that complaint. * 9. "Practically from girlhood I suffered from indigestion although jit was of course, worse some times than at No matter of how long standing the ailments for which Bileans are applied those ailments gradually vanish, For the greater portion of her life, Mrs. Francis Clare, of 40 Wnrrington Road, Widnes, had suffered from indiâ€" {estion, headache and allied ailments. ‘et longâ€"standing _ as those ailments were, Bileans have cured them. ilere is her story: Lived on Bread and Milk! Population. 262,749. Number of wards, 6. Area of the city, 13%% miles. Tax rate, 1844 mills on the dollar. $9.00 to New York and Return BECAUSE _ COULDN‘T DIGEST STRONGER FOOD. INTERESTING BILEAN CURE. FACTS ABOUT TORONTO. : city, 1334 miles. Hamilton Peopl 844 mills on the dollar. â€"Land, $63,386,502; buildâ€" Bleeding Piles Cured druggists and box, or Sirect (Colborne street, of _ price. 6 @IT 1§ A MIRRCLE!®" Finally, acknowledgment must be made of the supreme courtesy with which _ the Greek people entertained their guests. Everyone one met with the most charming treatment, and in the eyes of those who realized the bitter disâ€" appointment inflicted by the defeat of the native champions in the great Maraâ€" thon race, the magnificent reception given to the victor was a triumph of cordiality and good sportsmanship. n BRezn "For several yeare alitickigh N I have been troubled s l V with gas around my .as h heart, shortness of (. breath, my food did " f not digest property, *"~*&, It turned sour in my »; ‘ stomach, causing me ‘,\’ great distress; often, CY too, I had disagreeâ€" William H. Reed. _ able attacks of beichâ€" ing gas and heartburn, and severe paims across the small of my back. All Dealors, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. Mottentot widows cut off a finger joint when they remarry. poin ceased. 1 can now walk with ease and attend qhï¬'cua-mhr(luflnmu “lun%m-m-"h’n Ointment tmanyont anfering this annaying complamm{. " Hamilton, March 9, 1996." CSigmedy Mork O Rourke, 186 Mess St. N. J«3 jigh (Be) | q William H. Reed. WThe difficulty a forger has to contend against when imitating some one‘s handâ€" writing is in disguising his own. Experis are always on the lookout for forelgn charâ€" acteristics, for they very often leag to the identity of ithe forger. Moreland, the Oxford tutor, one of the most successful and cavable forgers who ever lived, could not only reproduce the handâ€" writing of sther people, but could write 10 fewer than seven distinctly different hands. H# had one failing, however. In writing in a different hand some of the characteristics of his own unfortunately crept in. This eviâ€" dently proved his downwfall. He wrote a number of blackmailing letters in a very fine, delicate, womanly hand. One of these letters was placed in the hands of the officâ€" lals at the Home Office tnd the handwriting expert who examined it discovered some of the characteristics of Moreland‘s natural writing in the calligraphy of the "lady." un ids 0 1001 MEA _ T Autograph collectors should be careful when purchasing letters, etc., that are supâ€" posed to be in the bandwriting of eminent neople that they obtain the real things. There are men in London whs make a good livng! .Bcib vtaazis! t zbkhraho emfw rthte livine by forging signatures and selling them at auction rooms and bazaars. One _ man known to me, has made as much as £60 in a month in this way. C HeAIR Wtc : css Aus M s t . .1A :101 Were it not for the camera the detection of forgeries would be almost impossible. Quite recently a cheque for the sum of £200 was honored at a London bank. It proved to have been forged. An eminent expert who was called in examined with a powerful hand lens the signature on the cheque without finding anything suggestive of forgery. He then put the cheque to the photographic test and found upon the resultant negative unâ€" mistakable signs of eraston and shading. The forger, whoever be was. bad first sketchâ€" ed the name in pencil and then filled it in with ink, shading the down strokes afterâ€" ward with a fine pen. : M e ett egy PC GRRE EVY in both, proving that the clork was the guilty party. However, for the soolish young fellow‘s sake, I kept my knowl:a.e to myself, pointing out to the merchant that in susâ€" necting his clerk he probably was making a mistake. Professional handwriting artists have much curious work to do. I am called upon almost daily to banish or confirm suspicions in matâ€" rimonial squabbles. Some weeks ago a young lady brought to me a birthday card she had received bearing a few words, but no name written with a pen. She was anxious to know whether the sender was a certaia young man with whom she had quarrelled three months before and not afterward seen. She showed me a letter she had received from him in days of yore, and, though the handwriting on the birthday card was disâ€" guised, I proved beyond a shadow of doubt, on comparing it with the letter, that is was from the young fellow in question. The lady was very pleased when I pointed this out to her, and 1 have since heard that the quarrel has been patched up and the parties are to be married a few weeks hence. Last February a well known city merchant received a gaudily colored valentine. He brought it to me, stating that he thought the sender was a clerk in his employ to whora he had refused an increase in salary. He wanted to know whether he had surmisol correctly. The word ‘"miser‘"‘ was written on the valentine in red ink, and on comparâ€" ing this with the usual wriitia; of the clork in question I discovered simil~,; jpecullaritics in both, proving that the clâ€">* was the :mllllty’plrty. However, for the ioolish young Curious Puzzles Experts are Expected to Solve, Yes, said an expert in handwriting it is no easy matter to tell which is a forged name and which is a bonaâ€"fide one, for the proâ€" fessional forger of toâ€"day is an artist in his lawless work. Fifty or sixty years ago handâ€" writing experts were suspicious by their abâ€" sence; now there are scores of them in Lonâ€" don alone, and the leading ones are conâ€" stantly brought before the public in connecâ€" tion with law casesâ€"big, sensational and curious. SECRETS IN HANDWRITING. â€""YRBAPE MARX AkGHTEALD Good to Winner. TORONTO Lots of people regard every request made to them, cither verbal or in writâ€" ing, to settle a bill, as a dun,. A dun is supposed to be more or less offensive. Just why any man should find fault when some one to whom he owes money asks him to pay it is more than we have been able to comprebend. If you owe a man money you ought to pay him if you can. If you cannot, it is your business to explain wh{ you cannot. Most people inknx some time or other to pay their bills, but not many are as prompt as thoycbouidboornthcyohonld like othâ€" ut 4. 1. & waev anew mattar when CBP Em 0 ® eu’to be. It is a very casy matter when adked to pay & bill, to exsldn to _ the creditor why you cannot do it and ask for more time. The debtor will generally get extra time if he is dealing with a reasonable man. The exasperating thing in connection with creditors is to write letter after letter or send statement afâ€" ue tune apparentt) with elent uon re t apparently & conâ€" 'S:pt. It is under such cireumstances that the creditor gets irritated _ and gives the account perhaps to an . atâ€" torney, when exarcising a little sense on thprtotth'dew the matter could be easily and u-htbiy adjusted. _ De not look on a dun to irritate It is m of a creditor to ask for T..., he does not ‘ï¬t it, and to keep askâ€" ing at intervals he does get it. MINAIRD‘S LINIMENT is the only Liniment asked for at my store and the only one we keep for sale. Pleasant Bay, C. B. The New York Central Lines anâ€" nounce a rate of single fare plus twentyâ€" five cents for the round trip to Bosâ€" ton, Mass., on the occasion of the openâ€" ing of the new Church of Christ Scienâ€" tist, June 10th to 17th, inclusive. Tickâ€" ets will be goon going June 2 to 11, inâ€" elusive, goor for return to June 18. Fascinations of the Heresy Hunt. "After all," soliloquised Mr. Edward M. Shepard, "when it comes to the funâ€" damentals, Dr. Crapsey, in his place, and Bishop Walker, with his higher and widâ€" er official responsibility, are both strivâ€" ing for the same things, and are in agreement upon the great fundamentals." But as long as there is any chance that the Bishop, and the rector may or do agree on the "great fundamentals" there are zealous priests and laymen who deâ€" mand that their disagreement on the "fine points" is what the Church is most interested in. And the more insignifiâ€" cant the priest or lawman the more earnâ€" estly does he try to be prominent in prosecuting somebody. The New York Central is the most direct as well as the quickest route. Pasâ€" sengers via New York may use Hudson River steamers between Albany and New York, in either or both directions, withâ€" out extra charge. Write or call on Louis Drago, Canadian Passenger Agent, New York Central Lines, 6914 Yonge. street, Toronto. Knows When to Quit. (Brantford Expositor.) It‘s a great thing to know when to stop. _ Hence we have the declaration of the hero of Marathon that he will never run another race. Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Frieng. Ask for Minard‘s and take mo Other, U. 8. Ambassador Wright this morning mudli-endutidltothl-plu 4 Japan. The reception was most corâ€" dial, and the ambassador and his suite were afterwards received in audience by First Church of Christian Scientist. /77 ces m sSS , KEEP THE WATCH CLEAN. Do You Get Duns? HARLIN FULTON. iaped Polly Pinktightsâ€"I _ don‘t ize him now.butlundtobenome of his. Fanny Footlightsâ€"When he had money to burn, I suppose. Amazing Marine Procession, The fleets of the world which roam the seven seas occasionally bunch up in some prominent port or passageway like the Suez canal and make an imposing showing. But in point of magnitude aiâ€" most any of these marine processions fall short of that unending commercial parade which is forever steaming down the great lakes and through the canals. The immensity of this traffic is refueectâ€" ed in the oficial figures for April, 1906, for the "8o0" cumal alone. _ During the thirty days of last month, 1,079 vesâ€" sels of 2,006,640 tons net register and carrying 2,513,267 tons of freight passed through this great highway. Nearly one â€"half of this traffic was iron »re, with coal to the extent of about 650,â€" 000 tons second in prominence and graim and flour next on the list.â€"Portland Oregonian, The lion tamer, who has nmo fear of the king of beasts, will often quail beâ€" fore an insignificant Welsh rabbit. Fow ieople who have not travelled about the Russian empire can imagine how boundless is its wealth in tim%)ar. "Wooden Russia" is the name applied to the vast forest areas of Russia in Europe, which cover nearlyr 5,000,000 acres, or 36 per cent. of the entire area of the country. In Russia houses built of any other material than wood aro almost unknown outside the cities and wood constitutes the principal fuel. The forest belt called the "Taiga," in Biberia, stretches in a direct line from the Urals to the Pacific for 4,000 miles and ir a great many parts is 500 miles broad. Al} this is the property of the czar. How to Chew. "Thirtyâ€"two chews to each mouthful," said Gladstone. _ "Chew till you can taste no more, and don‘t get angry," says Fletcher. Perhaps the second dicâ€" tum in his philosophy explains Fletcher‘s amazing career as much as the first. ‘The philosophy is helpful, and his career, as described in the American Magazine for June, holds more interâ€" esting adventure than three ordinary men amass. The taking of scalps has been spoken of so commonly in the press of the Unitâ€" ed States that it has become a general practice when speaking of a man losing his life among the Indians to say "He lost his sealp." Novelists even toâ€"day, when locating their stories in Apacheâ€" land, almost invariably scalp the victims of Apache vengeance, As a matter of fact, one can say that the Apaches never took scalps. Men who have been closely asociated with them for thirty years or more claim that no fullâ€"biodéd Apache ever scalped a man he killed. On the contrary, he would not touch a body afâ€" ter death and would throw away his weapons if stained with human blood. Their own dead the men never help to bury. _ This task is left to the women.â€" Scribner, Where Will You Go This Summer? "The River St. Lawrence Trip?" Folders descriptive of the Thousand Islands, Rapids, Montreal, Quebec, Murray Bay, Taâ€" dousac, the far famed Saguenay River, etc., on application to any railroad or steamboat ticket agent. For illustrate guide, "NIAGARA TO THE SEA," send six cents in postage stamps to H. Foster Chaffee, Western Passenger Agent, Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. lnlat Seap is better than other soape, but is best when used in the Sunlight way. Buy Sunlight Soap and follow direstions. If you desire rest and recreation, why not FIBRE WARE un ‘armers and Dairymen Tub, Pall, Wash Basin or Milk Par Apaches Never Scalped Victims, h gy n mmmmmmmmmmmmatimms Orange Blossoms You will find they give you satisâ€" _ e faction every time. THERE Is NO SUBSTITUTE Czar‘s Wealth in Forests, will do its work in thirty to sixty minutes. Y our clothes will be cleaner and whiter than if washed ind'neoldrfashionedwaywid\boilerandhudmbbhg. Equallygoodwithhardorsoï¬wner. s 'WMWW-MMNM“ Sunlight Soap E. B. EDDYS but is best when used in the Sunlight way. To appreciate the simplicity and ease of washin gwithSudid"s“Pi“dwsunuw After rubbing on the soap, roll up each piece-immersehdww““"“dâ€â€˜w‘y' eitive oure for "s. waon .. S Sree thms. Tib i turvie Sunligh so‘pi,wthg:::".er_s;oaps, Brothers Limited, J The managing editor wheeled bis chair around and paed a button in the wall. The person â€"wanted ertered. "Here," said the editor, "are a numâ€" ber of directions from outsiders as to the best way to run a newspaper. See that they are carried out." And the office boy, gathering them all Do not forget to enquire about the rates to Boston for the opening of the new Church of Christ, Scientist, June 10th to 17th inclusive. New York Cenâ€" tral Railroad is the direct line, the quickâ€" est, and most comfortable. Pu‘m via New York may use Hudson -tu-:n bot ween Albany and New York, ED uhk xn 5o. _ LW COC . _\ _ ;) _/ "O‘Ween Albany and New York, in either or both directions, without exâ€" While there can be no doubting the inâ€" tention of the British Government to henceforth dominate openly the political control of Egypt as a r:rt of the Britâ€" ish empire, the proposals of Lord Cromâ€" er clearly indicate that there is to be equal opportunity for all nationalities and full respect for acquired and vested rights. _ In other worzn, modern Egypt is to be governed on the open door prinâ€" cfl)le so strongly -dvoc‘u-cre by the Unitâ€" ed States in China and the far east genâ€" erally. While England will rule, she does not propose to insist upon any monâ€" opoly of trade or franchises, but, on the contrary, extends equal opportunity to all comers.â€"New (';‘euu ?"i’;yune.’ AVOID POOR IMITATIONS. ARCHDALE WILSON into a | Stories. Toronto. Sold by all Druggists and General Stores and by mail. 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