W B " w i n " pe " 'h " ft Banker, And the time wilt come when each one of us will have to cm“ the bar. And let W. with the great poet, supplicate that when that time comes, We may meet our Pilot bee to face, and be conveyed by Him to the norms of glory. And it in our curtNile we have committed our- ukel to His can and guidance. and hare chi-ed Bis all-preniling expiauon on the do. u out passport to that ".11...†" an abundant welcome be new“: accorded to us.--) u pest. of ram hunk-nu, and ot .ngry, surging billqwl. _‘_ _ - Lum- at tr." many .lo-vnhlom tree. Fur. the," vhmxv. why. bright ml vltt't's tower 1:,osur,ls (mum's 11w azure of the skies; “Mir tho narrow arm of the not: spar- kin‘ and glitters 49 though gemmed in dn “numb; at the mouth of the bay, 3011‘! the tide be low, torn by the wind . I mm and surf on the rocky bar. ..I now the shades of evening are c.'tl'tt ring ,the night hawk is uttering its es'.. m,- F churning call, and the weird cry vi tl. ' curley is waited across the gradu- at?) ricttst billowm. Fitiul gusts of wind " _lrF amongst the forest trees, swooping th. thnlS of melodious eolian mute; and the rhythmical sound of the M " .uM breaking upon the shore add their harnmnimu cadence to alt this min- atrel- y oi nature. But from time to the another voice of the night is hard, . plaintive moan. a rimmed, hated nob u of tearful grid, now rising to n we! despair. non mbsidilg to a sigh of d.- pondont. doldul mammal], " than“ . than“ of weeping sea-tuition wen - ina the death dime of was slum ship, which. heediem of their warning, b not- kssly inning to its doom. And woe to the marine: who my!“ the monition at that nothing at the m. For it in the 'tea".. of “on! lard ton. 'U law," says In Chtistial came up den loosed from u fell into the wpuh more. Then wus Ch tome, and said wit hath given me rest life by His death. Abmtnding," he "l country and mining my heart, this Scr mind. '11'PY mad of His Cross. I saw again that God {hen-h. This was an path that hope I shall never The late Dr. Dale vain attempts of u get rid of the awfr, "My theology no M. Spurgeon to a his bedside, “is in “an. died for me this would be all . I raised up again, die upon." The dyi on finds his hopes the sermons he had orphanage work, or in the knowkdge Ion]; the wide wor vetted through his only in this, Jesus to the glorrerowue and ask them huv and with one voice that we died for died for us." Follow with Thy blessing the delibera- tiona ot the Genml Assembly. Forgive what bu been wrong in spirit or con- clusion. Overrulc the counsels of Thy Denial. for Thy glory. Fill the hearts of all out teoirlt with the spirit of zeal and liberality. Draw us closer to our brethren in Christ Jesus. Let the com. ing you be filled with earnest labor for the Master and be crowned with the goodness of God. Amen. Almighty and most merciful God, our heavenly Father we thank Thee that Thy Church has been established upon the earth. We rejoice that Thou dost dwell union; Thy people and that Thou M lend them forth to Thy service and to the eonfliet with evil. We rejoice in the Issuance that Thy kingdom will Itnnd for ever and that it will at length corer the whole earth. We me, or Thy furor toward. that branch 0 Thy Church with which we are connected. Life were not wor It no one were the For having met m All! known the nut Give as thy G To no one be Bo hearts aha And face. hen Do Do To To al /F 9-" my") â€Â£19912?! u: hum beat mm. Iny voice. Mighten, but your footsteps on the stair, meet you, greet you, Anywhere? A Threnody of the Sea rest in His' luv His death.'" And in g," he says. "Travelling Ind musing on the wicket ',, this Scripture came i "in, made peace by th '03:. I saw that day " mt God and my son Chia was a good day to tall never forget it." Sunshine of Thy Stay. Your , “is in four for me.' I do I be all I should I again, but it i The dying prim: I hopes and pen I he had preaeho work. or his wile swiedge that m ide world over h ugh his nutrmm ' Jesus died for r-crowned many: em how they c at voice they wou ed for Jesus, b ll faster beat for thee In thy light. to Bee. '5 _.--." 'lil) riiiiii'iih1',j Little Words Prayer, now," said the dying C. a friend who stood by in four little words. me.' I do not say that ll 1 should preach were in, but it is enough to dying prince oi preach- es and peace. not in all run] preached, nor in his or his college work, nor Tc' that multitudes of orld over had been con- :is murumentality, but as died for me. You go med martyrs in Henna mw they came thither "a “my would my, "Not " Jews. but that He rorth the living, the better, thee on the way. sunshine ot thy at" Bunyan, "that just as , to the Cross his bar. off bid shoulders and 1vhre and I saw it no hristian glad and light- ith a merry heart, ‘He at by His Borrow, and h.'" And in "Graee Iys, "Travelling in the 1;; on the wickedness ot rriptur': came into my de peace by the blood m that day again and and my soul were 'tt forget it." , alter describing the nullitudes or men to Al some of guilt by ya, "At last they saw I ior their sins; and oke away; the light them; they knew iven. It is a wonder. one who has not an imagine its bless. aee with me; I have ore." -W. R. Lane. " if ing ' "nut not - "Still, I didn't use anything queer in that. But s few days later there was another Wt down in Jerry's and I stayed with the bore quiet tb while holdin' IT, and up and I got home awry ally in t 0 morning, but before the man an: the milk up in the dumb wsiter.. And after mentionin' to my wife my 1 past! the door d her room an busi- you I- hwy I m Min’ off my shoe-um)!“ Icould when Ina-ma patter sud than was that dawg agaht. And I says to him.. " ‘Hello, 01.. feite.' "But do you know tdttt than never unlu- u and. A. I bends over he " 'Erdf, h-r-H.’ "It m . noise sort of Ween I. cough and u menu, and: no bulldawgs can make. And my wife kinder cheers had been . lactic cold and aus- ill21'l', Iike-eatd.ho my: to me: "Oh, Gauge, you In tired ' Shall I gd up and tUtd you some tmppert" month. He take. a 3003 sniff, long and thoughtful like, and then he wags his tail and trot.» otf back to my wife's room. I follow, thinkin' he might want something. and I sees him go up to the bed, put hia two from paw. on it and up do“ to her an: something like WEI" bt very candid. "What he does do is the mum-est thing. He cums up close to me as I was bemiin' om him, puts up his ttttlm I). and with carefully ntpund. my on him in her lap again and she was talkin' to him an' they was havin’ a fine old Inn-wow together. "Now, Men, a few days after that I had occasion to go over to Schenectady to impact a plant, and I got home that night by the late train, vet tired and vary mm, because business L"l,71 gone my way. I looks in on my wife again and my: It m vbuainma, md the bull- dawg looks me over uglin. Chen I goes to my room. Pretty soon out he comes, just as I was many oft my M. _ " 'Hello, old fellow,' {pain il, turn, and pale him on the bark. But he doesn’t Id sometimes pm kep' out late. Conse. quently Mire. Blenkineop, my wife-sy ‘mm bein' Blenkinsop-trnt lonely and f she thought she’d like a little damp: for company in the flat; whereupon I buys i her the dlwg, that same dawg which is now mkin’ ell the trouble in my family. i "He's a line not up brindle, with a re- markable head on him ,thoutth I didn't think much of that at the time. I got him from Jerry Maloney. a friend of mine that wls in the liquor business on the corner around from where my busi- ness is. The mother was Jerry's and the sire belonged to a gent at the settle- ment norm the way from Jerry's place. I liked him on nemunt of the business- like way that he took the sass out of the retriever that Jerry brought home, and Jerry, prefvrrin' the retriever, an' it bein' no place for two of 'ern, I made a deal and got him. an to my own room and go to sleep. Well, I looked in at my wife and said how business had Imp’ me. and that "wt-Ate shops in her room-soo-l me over and come and smelled around some. but he makes no remark: and goes and lies down again. Bot the next day I “Seemnd to me he could understand. or pretend he did--thon,tr,h I can't believe now after what he did to that janitor, as there was much pretense about it--. what she said. to him, and she eert'nly could tell what he want“! when he gave one of thorn quot-r little smarts of his to show that he wanted his can tickled or his stomach satisfied or whatever he did think he needed. "Well. we'd had him Bome wmks when I was Rep 'out late on a matter of bush m. We'd had a diacmnion down in Jerry's plum and I had to hold my end utr-which I did. Consoquently I reaches home rather early in the morning, though before the milk got around. not inclined for explanations and glad to "TUt was all right, When I took him home the old lady was delighted and they trtruek up friends at once. Bein' lonely. she used to take him in her lap In’ tell him the troubles she had with the janitor and my aunt Sarah, and they had an undtarstaotiin' in no time It all. "Itu this way: My business, the dir. ers: supply bugging, makm me a mixer, in) the game, it}. time that breedin' 'em that fine was stopped. It's unnatural and unconstitutional and causes trouble in the family. There u, in fact, trouble in my family. and that trouble is doo to , trulldamt--Bmston kind, The reporter aid he'd m the editor about it, and waited because ét was evi- dent that the visitor had something on his mind. “When a dawg," observed the grave young man, "tteta the detective habit rubber shoe outfit, with a jag dictionary, ml 1 woman-I mould say lady-back. "Well," continued the grave young mun, "thu is shout a bulldawg. I want to reason with him about the intelli- gence they're getting into them some bulklawgs. Something hu got to be done about it. It ougher be "oped. It’s unnatulr The reporter said that the canine edi. tor was around the comet just then de- eiding for a mu whether a bulldog with . white cyo Bod a brown eye could see bust out, of the white eye or the brown eye, but a message containing any am- ount of reasoning could be left for him. "I Bat lookin' for the saint] editor," remarked the gnve young man with the reddi‘h was who came to the Times o6tiee but week . " mean the teller that puts in the paper them stories about the inteiligence of bulldnwgs. I want to mm. with him on that me.†(New York Times.) "The old man read this note and smil- ed. Then his brow darkened and he cried in s loud voice: A Blooming Fund. "A good old man was accosted one day in the suburbs by a robust chap of 35 or so, who said in a husky voice: "ts'uspeeting the fellow to be an impos- teredhe_old, gtnt)ertyut, said: "Pen tie-{fl don't hear you. Write what you have to say. Here is a. pencil In_d__hen_a is an _old ttlvtlope.1 - " 'Write with paralyzed hands! I hain't possible. But he's deer, and didn't hear me. I'll chuck a different bluff.' "So then he wrote with slow pains: "Am destoot with six children Stu-van " hum erin for bred please help for the love of heaven’ " 'You villainous imposter! I thought you had paralysis and couldn't grasp any- thing.‘ "The haggar- looked surprised and hurt. J'Dida't ye "r yo Wu deaf t' he gasp- "And here, his feeling: overcoming him, the man mind his 13.131de hand nag-n the agedreformisrstioxmsthe on. The. he made off on . nm."-otr - Chronicle. '"Kin ye gimme a little help, pardnert The price of a cup o' coffee and a roll? I'm paralyzed in both hands and ean't work.' "The beggar thought infently. He mut and to himself.. "'Weii, cried the hm" in I tone of righteous indignation, 'of all the bloom- in' frauds I ever seen you're the biggest! The idea of your pretendin' to be deaf and tryin' to impose on . poor feller wot.-." mi " was for ASE " ‘Yes. in order to find out if you were Garvin; mer', -- _ The longest um; Yunnan In. bun sway frym HMMQ "not I- m Sold by all Draught: and General Stones and by mil. t TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM And now, too, how rieh and voluptuous are the mountains, with their woodland ttdvttneemont.--springfiehl Republican. "I was induced to try Anti-Pill by reading the testimony of someone who had been cured of constipation by It. I had suffered for erghtoen years and had taken tons of stuff recommended " cures, but which made me worse rather than better. Doctors told me there was no euro for me. Dr. Leonhardt's Anti. Pill cured me." Sunbo Bowles' New Poem. This is the wooing, the winning, the gracious, the maidonly June---ready for bridal, for the true love, for the long love, and cauturing all. All dealers, or the Wilson-Pyle co., Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. And now there are calopogons, p0gmr ins and the supreme arethusa that for low. CHAS. H. POWELL "And the next thing I knew my wife was out of bed and standin’ over me, with the dawg in her arms, tellin' me how I oughetr eh ashamed of myself, disgracin' my family by stayin' out with low companions, drinkin' histhbaU and awappin’ stories when my wife and our 'angel ehiW-she. meant him ,tho bull. dawg--- was waitin’ up lonely for me to 00m home. Oh, young teller, she gave me rats. Whtmorer I trial to tell her about business or anythin' hike that she out me off ohort." King-ton Man '1‘th How He Sulfa-ed nnd How He w“ Cured. comes close up to me and take: a good sniff around my mouth, takin' in the highbal breath .1: me. Then Le drops his tail and trots back to her room and I hear him along the passage raise up beside her bed and make a lmvpdrawn out remark in the way bulldawgs can, that sounded somethin' like this.. Otttftt which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD again! 21 Amerlcnn, British and CtutBdlatt manuttueturerB, after 3 two month-' thorough trial. Made by MOLD. SIMPLE? a ram co. mm“. Brantford, hula " IMPERIAL†PUMPINE WIHDMILL ARCH DALE WILSON, WILTON. ONT. A BUSHEL OF FLIES " 'Krtr.etf'.' TORONTO MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED. Wilson' s "Far years B mar- tyr," is how Chas" H. Powell, of 105 Raglan street. Kingston, be. gins his story. "A martyr to chrome constipation. but now I am free from it and atl through the use of Dr. Leotthardt's Ante Pill. FLY PADS ONE PACKET HAS ACTUALLY KILLED h‘uhnhmdpudyum-n Mr. OM is the uranium be-he cl “4*. “kWh-wok, tzrstgrg1C'taretSnt a“ 0*. B.- .d oh i'- - tiN.ab--0he02di0 "amitte -.-TutNmittr'C..dC-N,urimd 1tgt'i'hft:1'iit'i'et:"p'i'gtL. Pl.) 'lL",'."':,' the only an guy; We t '"tsrearsthadPiusoAichtrerediet+ M. 'Theitehimgtaigt alumni-lad urban-Ole. 0/11: [Julnduwa '.it+tstWtetar-iromduty. [Imam all. 'oiaftrea-afies,Nreari"peor- “MMJINI- Yak-diuBMSb-h- '9erHgr---aharuetrtroeghtfgrr_ hymn. thi-at-ies-am-rue, "tW-e-ar-Mft-oat-e-era" "rea. "etrashovetistPtttyiv'ri"'irH ind-cam. [Eu m and gunman-dam mpdrreias u a may“: FirlDQCHI“. ‘ldmgbv mum-410‘" Dill-lat have. 'qfgrirrrfrss' this aroerime WW. “Hamil". that 9. lat." __ - It is strawberry amt-on. The best my of serving berries, especially at break- fast. is with the hulls left on. If the fruit is large and perfect no washing is necessary. Simply wipe three or four at a time with a small bmsll. It berries must be washed, be sure to let the water flow over them after hulling, as they cannot be handled well after they are wet. Another good ice cream and straw- berry dish: Make balls of vanilla ice cream, roll in cocoanut until they are very bristly and surround with berries. This berry pudding is recommended: Sift together three cups of flour, a lit. tle salt, a. tonspoonful of biearbonttte of soda and a litle cinnamon to flavor. Mix with a cupful of molasses and half a. cup- ful of water. Stir in a pint of berries and steam in n. mould for an hour and a. half. A delectable combination of vanilla ice cream, strawberry ice and while straw- berries: Put a tablespoonful of vanilla ice cream in a punch glass, cover com- pletely with strawberry ice and arange strawberries on top. V "Sinle I have been at the board of edswation, I have become ar-quaintcd with a men; many hyupvord.ss." _ J -.- "No momentary education can ever make me otherwise than nervous in the prcxsence of the headmaster.†I "i regret that some of the fine trees that wore in Four grounds have had to be sacrificed, but it is a. most disagree- able thing.to have a fine four-hit at cricket interfered with by the boughs of a tree, however beautiful.†“Difference of edumtion is the dif- ference between people who are well educated and those who are badly edu. cated." - "Though Shakespeare was not I Et fossor, ho occasionally said a t ing worth repeating." - _ perient'e Augustine Birrell, the British minis- ter of education, who is now facing a great deal of criticism in his country, as an able epigrmn-maker. In a reecnt address he said: "If the children of the future are to be wiser than their forefathers in pro- portion to the superiority of the build- ings in which they receive their educa- tion all the young people in the gallery will be Newtons or Darwins." Educational Epigrams in Englnnd Called "Birre1lisms." "ciirUtiitiJtira/e, a form of torture of which I have had quite sufficient ex- Under the huilding return it is shown that Great Britain is building6 first- class battleships. 10 armored cruisers, 18 torpedo boat destroyers and 15 sub- marines. Frame: Six first-class battle- ships. 23 torpedo boat destroyers, 52 torpedo boats, and 32 submarines. Russia: Four first-class battleships. 4 armored ornisors. l first-class protected cruisers. 29 torpedo boat destroyers and 15 submarines. Germany: Six first- class battleships, 2 armors-d cruisers, 6 sorond-clnss proteetod cruisers. 6 tor- pedo boat dastmyers and I submarine, "exporimontal." Italy.. Four first-class battloshopg, 2 armored cruisers, 4 tor- pedo boat dostrnpors. 20 torpedo boats, and 4 submarines. - London Daily Graphic. Japdn. ll) Great turning being 8. War Vane!- Duilt and Btd5dttte tr m- ing Initiate Pom A return showing the fleets of Great Britain. France, Rania, Germany, Italy, the United States of America and\ Japan on March 31, 1900, ftstinTishi'1rl battleships built and building, torpedo vessels, torpedo boat destroyers, torpedol boats and submarines, built or building. was issued as a. Parliamentary White Paper yesterday. A _ ... . . . A I countries is as follows: Great Britain, 61; France. 29; Russia, 12, Germany, 31; Italy. 16; United States, 15; Japan. 11. Cawt defenee vessels, armored: France. 9; Russia, 6; Germany, 11; United States, 11; Japan. 3. . Firi'di'oi"liir'eGsti. Great Britain, 114; France. 57: Russia. 13; Germany, 47; Italy. 25; United States, 35; Japan, M. v..,...... ..-. Submarines: Great Britain, 25; France. M; Rllasin. 13; Germany, 1; Italy, 2; United States. 8; Japan. 5. Great Britain is the only country re- turning scouts. the number entered Torpedo vessels. torpedo boat de. stroyers and torpedo boats: Great Bri. tain. 25!: France, Ml; Russia, 247; Ger- many, P.P; Italy, 152; United States, 54; --mrHarrtihonNisrk Bleeding Piles Cured -attaeY-dththrin. Mncu-z- my» 'rt-u' the a, a IT " A MIRJCLEI" ir'iii, 1iiiiiJr%t battleships ll 1hefe GREAT “SETS or THE WORLD. Berry-Time Suggestions. READ THEM. Marl 0M. Illlat St. N. ' HIE-u. 551:1 i, if??? MP-" ----V _J. The little fellow said "memrme one day, out] she said it was . pity so long as I 1-3.4 if I ever had another child it won be another boy, for whichâ€: the first child “id first, mum or “loved what the sex of the sand Slllt 'Te um: h .e_tof_stqeesttt- ( we. me n Hound that child I madly I... m for fear he would me ill o In- “uuhhyorsmuud'lvu (Ind yhen the loft nun-N. Y. Elm Then when I held my baby up to the mirror she shrieked and pulled me uuy and said that if a baby saw himself in a mirror before he was a you old he'd die before_he ya: tro, yen: old. When the baby was dressed for his first trip out-doors Ito und her climbing the attic stairs with him. On my de- manding an explanation she aid that if tb child was to have luck through ita lift it should than go up below it went down, so she was going into the attic with it before she took it down- stairs. When the baby fell out of bed Ind bumped hu poor little held die didn't give him a bit of symmthy, but add she was glad, for if a baby didn't fall out of bed before he was a you old he'd be a fool. She worried me to (lath gl'lg,r behind his left on: to see if a. lite brown spot them we: going to be . mole, for the said I. mole behind the left en uncut thtglte, me be hanged some day. Mother insisted on my engaging on. of the old-fashioned kind when my little son was born, and althiugh we found her delightfully free from pednnic the. orios she was almost bound but! and foot by superstitions. A Minnrd'l Liniment Cures Cunt in Cows. Talking in sleep is more common than is generally supposed. Of two hundred studonts beiween the am of 20 and 30 years, 41 per cent. of the men and 37 per cent. of the women tnlkad in their sleep, and most of them could “lower questions-Harper" Weekly. Miami's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. I’ll never have an old faahioned null. grain. said the voung matron with I may!!! mopttp' old baby. _ In case of a. Betni.offiehrl or other wed- ding, when gifts are receivnd in such quantities that a personal note to each would be impossible, it is usual for the bride's mother, or her mather’s or fath- er's wrotury. to indite those replies. Any such arrangement is avoided when poasible, though, as the appreciative per- sonal note affords the giver much plea- sure. They are sent eatly. They are acknowledged immediately. They are sent, by intimates, when the engagement is formally announced. It is very wrong to make ono's gift at the Inst morneat,as the bride is bound to sci-mowledgg it barge!!! if Jrossible. - in'caae the annour1.oement is missed they should be dispatched as soon as the invitation is rewivod. Your money refunded by the dealer from whom you buy Sunlight Soap f you find my cause For complaint. - Even the daintiest linen or lace, or the most delicate colors may be safely washed with Sunlight Soap in the Sunlight way (follow direr tions). Equally good with hard or soft water. Common soaps destroy the painted or varnished surfaces of woodwork and take the color out of clothes. Best for all household put" poses, Sunlight Soap's super" iorily is most conspicuous in the washing of clothes. is a perfect cleaner and will not injure anything. Smtight Soap NURSES' SUPERSTITIONS. Lever Brothers Limited. Toronto Somniloquy. Bridal Gifts. Bushing ga, Evading Gr injurious rimming!) or Any (cm ot .dulteration. A well-known bishop. in be In going lbout his dioeese, stopped the porter of I lunatie asylum tad “kpd how u dauphin whom he (the bishop) had lately appoint- ed wu getting on. "Oh, by ler," said the man. "his punching is most successful. The hidiou henjoys it Ltr-tie-ky-r.'..':-.--?)))-). Mind's Liniment Cures Distemper, Wipe Out the Vermin. (louder: Globe.) Mad or nine. Anarchists are vilely and Ibominably wicked, their enthlusilxm for humanity is a sham, am they have no purpose beyond the gratification of the most boatial cruelty. They deserve no pity, and should receive none. They have appealed unto Terror; to Terror let them go. We would not hesitate to inflict upon than the tortures they de. sign for others; and since they maintain that death by high explosive: is com- praatively merciful, we should not have tho least objection to seeing them made to test their own theories. In the man- time an agreement among civilized ne- tions to give them 1 wand doe of the eat before execution might at u . de. tfrmt upon persona tempted to join Minnrd’s Liniment Co., Limited: Gent1emen,--Lmgt August my horse was badly out in eleven plums by I barb- ed wire fence. Three of the out. (small ones), healed soon. but the others be. came foul and rotten. and though I tried many kinds of medicine they had no de- suh. At last a doetor advised me to use MINARD'S MNIMENT and in four Weeks' time ovary Bore was honlml and the hair has grown over each one in fine #ondition. The linim-‘nt is certainly wonderful in its working. Women Money Banners. Unfortunately the majority of wo- men money earners remain amateurs in their work as well as in their ac- eomplishmenta and studies. They often work for years without considerng " their time and labor could not bespent to better advantage. Ifa woman is to earn money at all, why should she not put ambition and en- ergy into her Work to accomplish as much as possible. She should not allow herself to be satisfied with doing anything short of her best in whatever she undertakes. It is by no means desirable that all women should be money earners. but it is most import. ant that all should be capable of earn- ing enough to support themselves and those dependent upon therm-Amerienn Magazine. s,fit.te,ttttir,,,.tt Blonnom- 2ea"SNtrsalt., 1r.ft.1u','grtatu'l2rte-. "In a. "n...-. The .ttpmtttttende.nt of another Asylum teth, of a patient who rvo'.vod a plan tor llylng a cable around the world In two dun. m. Me: was to "no up n powerful bulloon to the [Hunt possible altitude with I cable unwed. By the revolution of the out!) on Ita nxll the cable would, he drriisrmi. be laid complete- tr Around the earth In twenty-tour hours. The omcui. bummed thin gentleman by telling him the Idea Vin I good one, but that he would need tb second Mr Dunn on top of the tint. to exh-uu the air that would be pressing down that pump, and new". that. and so on. but he declared he once made a model that work“! aplendldly. Ho said: 'Ht "Mr About the room like I bird. Untorturutelr, the window rhanrod to be open " the time, '"U..1 flew out and I thereto" lost it." II now quite cured, and I: a â€numb-t prominent mun, " nlme e.ttrtot, ot coum. be given: but " Invention, da- Mened and modelled u I diversion vb". absolutely Insane. nu Ilnoo brought him In thouunda of dollarl. A lunntlc It In aarturn In [Am-lint m- Tented I flying latching. together with on . unique method of sulpendln‘ It in mid-air. "Atmospheric pressure being fifteen pomU to the scum Inch," he and. “I have simply to exhnuo: I“ tho air from above my olr-Ihlp by no cour- mouu .tr-qsump thrmt ovor the whole dock. And the air manure underneath will sup- port the ship." Strnnze to say. we; I host ot ab- eurd ideas. he land produced two that Ire rssdily prank-stale. His (fiends and the physicisn quoted hue supplied bin with such harmless materials no he I!- atures; snd he has lately finished . simple sutomsuc contrivsnoo tor “I. bend ot s tennis racket. to pick up tho halls end abolish stooping. tt set- per- fectly. and so convinced no I number of officials in the institution that there is money in the ides. that they hsve advised the lunstic's triende to secure s put- ent tor him, in one he becomes cured. His other invention is ot s different kind. being a rally emcscious preven- tive ot senickness. It in very Minnie: two of its component parts sre in every kit- chen and the rest in every drug store. I very valuable Improvement connected with mchlnery. now In duly use every- where, wu Invented by the Inmate ot In asylum tn Manchu-eta. wan gnown to every one br, name. As he Lattice Who has“! in Really mefigt Adidas. gtustauamrat-te-brttt. resident physician of I lane uylum for the inane neu- Washington that per- son confined in and: insulation: tre- oueuuy diupley an inventive turn of mind. One ot hie own patients. dechree this official, bellevel him-alt shut up in the uyluxn beau†ot hi- inability to be! the union“ debt, end in the hope ot raising the wherewithal to deiny an: tre- Iing obligation. end co chain rem-e, he bu defaced him-ell to inventing things. _ _ A. u: III-tuned ik uu"eGvTrGir'ot tho butâ€. " _U_tnttrerattrw to new that max Ii." HOLDEN. \Yitness. Perry Baker. FIBRE WARD-Lay. Farmers and Dairymen 'IN 855‘. 1iilrhill,htt8tttitritttttttit You will find they 31v. you outlo- "tilllllllll faction every ulna. mm: 15 no suns'rrru-m mm» " may. P'""'"""-'---,-,.. Complimentary. . B. EDDY'S “an“. Digby, N. bl tkrihbur--mn, i aim of follow. tkrawler-Yes anything gxoept . Hand ttttr-Here we've been marrivd just on. month, and now you no longer love an. FP-Put. my dear-- "Don’t try to explain. I'm not blind. You made A mittfke--rost ought to have mniod some sill}. stupid woman. "Bu. dearest, 1'i.e" u-la-, Translated tor Tile. from Minard'a Liana-at Cum cow, on. Mrs. FYat--ANt, you can't Mr. I#tatr--Ptottitrir not, going to tread the mt of argument "at my sine I (New York World.) Nothing else Inn to impraued John 11 Rockefeller during his any in France on the thrift and industry of the people. "There is no wants," he nyl, with ul- miratiots, "in farm or field; there in no waate in the kitchen." Mr. Rockefellor put his finger " oetce upon n source of France’s strength. Kings have gono. and come, empire. crashed in the dust. ful- ions in republics changed, but the French peanut has gone on suudfutly tilling the mil with n [In-donut love of produc- tion. The revolution made him I had owner and no shift of government. or chum of industrinl conditionl bu wou- ed him any from the land. In bu been attending hem no. for thou-was of nun, And will â€My con- tinue to do so centurie- Mter the automobile shall ha" been unmade-1 by con. cunt wonderful Inventlon. The bong-lea up Witt never - It In mmlng I. 6ettetaderttt on the nutomohlle or may ttttter lnunlmte ll- ventlon “bouncing tho born In the Inoc- tlom of the people. it. bounty of " limbs. MI new nook and quivering noo- trllc. " Minty movements. All - to the eye mod-r "on ll they dld thou-and! a! you. no. In with mtt8tetatag funds to mtlty their plenum wlll conunn h on; tampon- who. [or harm until ttm End ot “no. . (Phihdelphil Pun.) “Can't I induce you to go to ehumht" uked the est-neat e-wt. hobo, “Perhnpu you hue Iona feeling Iggy†the fhumh that mire-z" -, "so, I ain't got no gridge Igin ttt mine Wu: . home wedditt'." zine mm tt lemma W" Bor-We planted the yellow kind. Dru-er-it does not look like you will get more than bait a crop. Bor-rt make. no difference, as " only get lull of It. anyway. -- . . l- __4_ .-. Folderl d-trttttP'rt ot the The“ _ Rapids, Intro-l. Quoboc. lunuhlu. n- douuc. [no In [and Menu m. a... on .ppllc-uou to any unread " nun-boll ticart - For Illa-true guide. “NIAGARA To "II BEA." and II! can.“ In - m n H. - cum... lie-torn PM - ""iriy1"-"iG'," air; the fenre in just be- tween ua.-9mige'. Magazine of Fun. Where Will You Go This Summer? A drummer In: passing a corn new in Floyd County, Va. Me out . boy in the field. Tho corn did not look very promising, and the following convent tion occurnd; - ""ii'rutiin'iriha aa Goth. very far from I fool. _ _ _ _ 'i",iiciiiiiiic-"r corn look: very yol- w. An m. any ad". any out than“! an up; !“W‘I Mace uh. W. a. ADAMS. on - Ief: Toronto. 'et..Therat-ttter_rttAt.tt"",; In...“ Md..- mhc- n iir=i'urauii.j-ftet.eh'PP, Ta%airG'ririra-drh'ro"" laugh Inphhturdnnomnupg but in MththoIIwghtw. luylumgltlupudwnm Mr. "Oh, not fur mine, doe," Implied an The Thrifty Punch Peanut. Don Not Blane the Church, lln'l Love for the Home. Willing to bid“ The. ttat-Now, if you'll just listen to He Bad Tried to Plane. MISCELLANEOUS. ENVELOPES Dnnnu and Bor. - 'iiiaiFriis G brief hr 'itit.SNgli"M. a no! PILL 00.. unn- - - 7.- V v, - [can “end. u! an guru. but I} an ~I P-ncla-I nun. t and mm Trv, “9.73.1“ g PEEKEE' PILLS Kahuna mum-mm I W]. I." lulu-d I: "In. to!" "In no, “I! tatmtePl. NO. 27. 1906 ler-Yea. he a, {M f mond's mecca. my share of the {in t and Ioreiviete we ad mum. M my best."-- “la Rim." convince Ina. but if Vin tht light in field ‘b cl “HT!!! while. but. ti tt tt lug hi oient 1 can v Sh Tt Utters TY th the Tim wh and bra! gee his , teetioit her in W Formerly for wh tih ll If NI D " Th " sh ll