s | [o O Lord, Thy will be done. Make us strong enough to bear the doing'ol it; it may trouble us much; it may blind us when we are looking at beauty; it may deafen us when we are listening to the voice that charms us most ; still, Thy will be done. Thou hast shown Thy chilâ€" dren great and sore trouble; but each has come out of the cloud and the storm saying: !t was good for me that I was afflicted : before I was afflicted I went astray. . Thou hast given some of Thy children great power and honor and mears of many kirds; may they realize their stewardship. and sct as the trusâ€" tees of Christ. Bless all noble hearts, prosper all noble purposes, send a blight upon all deceit and vanity, and as for all wickedness do Thonu drive it down to nas come oul of the ci0 saying; It was good fo afflisted : before 1 was astray. . Thou hast gr children great power . mears of many kirds; their stewardship. and tees of Christ. Bless prosper all noble purpes upon all deceit and v: all wickedness do Thonu hell. Amen. Soiled with the dust of the gazing streot Stealing in where He sat at meat, The Three. Mary of Nazareth, loving and kind, The mission of Him she bore difined Vaguely and dim, with a wondering mind. Mary of Bethany, g Gave Him what ch spare, And gmiled with t! prayer. Mary Mary Mary But And her wealth of warm, dark hair, unâ€" bound, About His feet she wound and woundâ€" Her sobbing was the only sound. Mary the hostess made Him her guest, He had lain on Mary the _ mother‘s breast, But the Magdalen‘s gift was the costli She brought her past shame, Stra Omne One () san Ar had none of the devices of the elocuâ€" tionist. "Whether preaching _ in _ St. Mary‘s at Oxford, or under the open sky at (Gwennep in Cornwall, he was always the same quiet, refined, but plainâ€"speaking man." Though his auâ€" dience . was numbered“l‘:{ thousands, he spoke to each individ "Said John Nelson, when he first heard him, _ ‘He made my heart beat like the pendulum be true to buns@‘di. The rewards of faith are not given for the service of fear. The dogmatic man‘s bark comes out of a toothless mouth. You will never find the kingdom by looking for it in a eash box. Take care of your character and your credit will take care of itself. sImp that reaps. To be genuine is a being godly.â€" Nobody talks muc doors on Easy street Sentonce Sermious. The Lord‘s lambs do not ne i epunials : ~ > ; /0 . . oi a clock. I thought he spoke to no one but me. This man can tell the seâ€" erets of the heart.‘" Nor was it only or chiefly _ the spiritually _ cultured whom he reached. The lowest of the low oftem constituted a large element, if not the largest element, in his congreâ€" gations. Here is a snapshot of some typical hearers: "One day, as he was going to preach on a common _ near Chowder, twenty or thirty children ran about him like some dumb, hungry aniâ€" mals. They were only just not naked. The eldest, a girl of fifteen, had only a gim of ragged blanket hanging upon er, ard a dirty cap upon her bead." But he rarely, it would probably be safe ame, And in her tears was washed from blame! _ Ha preached, rather, the love man, because his own hbeart with a great love and pity i nring and suffering fellows."â€" to say never, appealed to the lower and meaner motives of his auditors. "It is evident that if Wesley led these, trades men and cobblers ard ammgulers&o feel that they were sinners and nceded some how to get rid of their sin, he did it mot by threats, seldom even by warnings. yÂ¥ i i tell tmm all my joys, I tell Him all that pleases me, 4 tell Him what annoys; He tells me what I ought to do, He tells me what to try, Aumd so we ta‘k together, My Lord and L. Aimd H I have His yoke upon me, Ard easy ‘tis to bear; In the burden that He carried I giadly take a share; Eo rthen it is my happiness To have him always nigh; We bear the yoke together, My Lord and L Ar And 1e sat with patient joy at His side, ie stood by the Roman cross where He died. 1e gave herself and her broken pride, Frederic Lawrence Knowles, In Love Triumphant. $ f John Wesley. lis power over other men furnishes still stronger evidence pointing in the ae direction. _ His preaching _ was ime. undramatic. â€" unrhetorical. â€" He d so He bids me go and speak The loving word for Him; _bids me tell His wondrous love, \ird why He came to die; d so we work together, y Lord and L the virgin marvellod with fear, the listener lent Him hber ear, Mary the prodigal faltered nearâ€" wonder ard loathing filled the place Simon counted her touch disgrace »ent o‘er the Master her tearâ€"stain ed faceâ€" knows zow I am longi ime weary soul to wim; the Magdalen kissed His feet est forethought that sows is th SW My Lord and I. talks much about the back Rasy street. fls‘ i e onE wild â€" moemories fik the am longing s0TFOW & ntle and fair, er her home could long step towards lod who feats im neecded sSoil sin, he did it mot n _ by warnings. e love of God to heart was filled pity for his sin ws."â€"Outlook. rCe its bliss and lower .nul' Thers does not scem to be much ts. "It is | doubt that the first bathing mactine se trades | was seen at Margate. England, and rssto feel J that it was the mvention of a worthy deckb som« |; Quaker named Beale, who placed his did it mot ‘ hopeful invention on the Margate Beach warnings. | in 1750. But it was the old story; the of God to l public became grateful after the inve tor was fille4} had been ruined by his entorpetso. His t his «in | successors nave seaned the narvest, Old Jutlook. Benjamin Beaic‘s wilow ~ould cemember in her last days the first family that reâ€" sorted to Margate for the ‘urpose of d to look hth:z being carried into the sea in a eovered cart, In 1803 Beake‘s machines of quict Back to luncheon, there is usually some function at which the Queen, and, of course one or more of her maids of honor must uttend. If a king or queen or any one of princely rank, is visiting King Edward the maids of bonor must be present with the Queen to greet them on arrival. During the season when drawing rooms are held, the maids take part in the royal procession to the throme room and are in attendance upon her majesty throughout the ceremony. At the state concerts they sit immediately beâ€" hind the Queen and her daughters. At state balls they are always close at hand to adâ€" just the Queen‘s cloak or wrap or to take her faa or flowers from ber. Unless requested to join the royal family at lunchoon or dianer, meids of honor, aftor having placed a special bouquet upon the dinner table at the Queen‘s right hand, reâ€" tire to the dining room kept specially for the other ladies and genticmen of the houseâ€" hoid. They ara again in attendance upon her majesty immediately sho onters the drawing roomâ€"â€"to play the pilano, to sing, to read, to play bridge, to do needlework, painting or any amusement or occupation which Queen Alexandra may decide upon. Being a renowned musician herself, the Queen spends a good deal of hber time at the piano and the maids are usually chosen because of their accomplishments in this direction. ‘All are excallent pianists and singers. They must needs be so, else they would not be able to take part in the duets which her majesty loves to take part in personally, with the brilliancy of style and absolute accuracy of detail that would asâ€" tonish many a firstâ€"rate professional perâ€" former. ‘There is no ceremony, indeed, not even of a semiâ€"offictal nature, such for instance, as the presentation of medals by the King to soidigrs returned from service abroad, or the distribution of badges to hospital nurses, at which the Queen is prosent without her maids of bonor. in all royal processions, moreover, these ladies occupy the carrlage immediately preceding that in which the Queen herself is sitting. f Eoo PAE ENNE TSE To the management of horses will be adâ€" ded the care of the sick and the poor. For it is on such ocalkgn that the Queen pulls up before some of the cottages of her vilâ€" lagers and sends her maid of honor to inâ€" auire as to the health and prosperity of the While Queen Alexandra is engaged in poker work, art needlework, or carving, in all of which she is particularly proficient, she ofâ€" tem desires one of her maids to read to ber. Here, again, proficiency in foreign tongues is essential, for the Queen may require the book to be translated into English or to be read in the language in which it has been printed. At any rate, the elocution must be of the very best order. A Seottish piper was passing througch a deep forest. In the evening he sat down to take his supper. He had hardly begun when a mumber of hungry wolves, prowling about for food, collected round him. In selfâ€"defence the poor man began to throw pieces of his victuals to them, which they greedily devoured. When he had diaposed of all, in a fit of despair he took his pipes and began to play. The ‘unusual sound terrified the wolves, which one and all took to their heals and scampered off in every direction, on observing which Sandy quietliy reâ€" marked, "Oh, an‘ I‘d kenned ye liket the pipes sae weel I‘d a gie‘n ye a apring afore supper." Until,the Queen retires for the night the maids are not free from their responsibilitâ€" les. Although very comprebensive, the dutâ€" tes of a maid of honor are not arduous, the Queen being a most considerate and kindly mistress. And, of course, should one of the maids marry during her terms of office, Queen Aloxandra, as has been the custom of the court for conturies, presents her with £1,000 as a dowry. Her majesty‘s consent, however, must be obtained for the match. Most of the maids marry exceedingly well, their position in the court naturally bringâ€" in@ them in contact with highlyâ€"eligible suitore. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. It seeoms clear from statistics pres:itâ€" ed in Co;greu at its last session, while the agricultural bill was under discusâ€" sion, that, notwithstanding the increasâ€" ing use of automobiles and the substituâ€" tion of electricity for horseâ€"power _ in street cars and elsewhere, we are still a long way from the "horseless age." In fact, it appears _ that the equine tribe is increasing rather than otherwise. The aggregate of horses in the United States on January 1st, 1906, stood at 18,718,578, against 14,364,667 at the corresponding date of 1897. Their total value increased from $452,049,306 in 1897 to $1,510,889,â€" 906. _ This startling rate of increase in value is no more marked than that of mules, according to the same government authorities. There were 2,215,654 mules in 1897 and 3,404,661 in 1906, and the values were respectively $02,302,000 and $334,630,520.â€"Leslie‘s Weékly. were one of the institutions of Margate. It was alarmingly claimed for them that "they may be driven to any depth into the sea by careful guides." The Editor‘s Lament. (Clinton, N. C., Demoerta.) When we see so ma:geyomh men with their hair parted in amddtle and hanging down over their foreheads so as to obscitre every trace of intellect, '-.! : ;:;; yo'umimen with their hair all frirslyâ€"frowsly and flopping around over their faces in fifty diffarent directions, The First Bathing Machine. Not a Horseless Age. want to have a say. Liked the Pipes, Pack the washed cucumbers in a stone crock, alternating each layer with a thick one of salt. _ Pour in enough cold water to cover the contents, then lay a heavry plate on top of the pickles, to keep them from floating. Leave in this brine for a fortnight, stirting up the cucumâ€" bers from the bottom eevry day or two. At the end of a fortnight go carefully the cueumbers, and throw out all that are soft. _ Lay the firm ones in a kettle, lined with grape leaves, and sprinkle a little alum over each layer of pickles. Cover with water, and put several thickâ€" nesses of grape leaves over the top of the cucumbers. Put the top on the ketâ€" tle, and steam gently for six or eight hours. Drain, and throw the cueumbers into cold water. When cold, pack in jars. Have ready a gailon of vinegar, which has boiled for five minutes with a dozen blades of mace, three dozen black pepercorns, three dozen cloves, 18 alspice, and a cup of sugar. Pour this lcnYded liquid into the jars, and seal. ** IMPERIAL Outfit which wo. ...: CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Made by GOOLD, SHAPLEY 2 MUIR CO. LIMITED, Brantford, Canada. Exercise for Business Men. The average city business man withâ€" out physical impediments to _ fight against can probably get along successâ€" fuly on such an exercise schedule as the following: _ fusk y * 1. Five minutes each day of purely muscular exercise, such as can be taken perfectly well in one‘s room, without any special apparatus. _ _ 2 2. Short intervals during the day of fresh air, brisk walking, deep breathâ€" ing. _ This can all be secured in the regular order of the day‘s business. _A man can easily spend as much as half an hour walking out of doors every day. This is for heart, lungs and digestion. 3. The reservation of at least one day a week for rest and recreation, for being out of doors, for playing games, ete. This is an essential. This is for both body and mind. A man who thinks he can get along without at least one vaâ€" cation time a week simply proves his igâ€" norance If a Cow gave Butter mankind would have to invent milk. Milk is Naâ€" ture‘s emulsionâ€"butter put in shape for digesâ€" tion. Cod liver oil is exâ€" tramely nourishing, but it has to be emulsified before we can digest it. cgombines the best oil with the valuable hypoâ€" phosphites so that it is easy to digest and does far more good than the oil alone could. That makes Scott‘s Emulsion the most strengthening, nourishing food â€" mediâ€" cine in the world. Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists ‘Toronto, Ont. €60c. and $1.00. All druggists Scott‘s Emulsion If you feel to have lost all energy and ambition ; if your head aches and your hand trembles; if you have "Summer fag" and are always " tired," try a box of Bieans! The result will more than satisfy you. Miss Rogers, of Beaconfield. says :â€" "I was.run down, pale, out of breath with least effort, almost too weak and fagged to walk! Bileans restored me. Am toâ€"day in good health." Obtainable from all druggists, 50c. per box Small Cucumber Pickles, PING WINDMILL TN I AMINS TORONTO hi‘ brabriant ‘The soft or silver maple, says Arboriâ€" culture, suffered by far the greatest loss, which the Carolina poplar, or cottonâ€" wood, was also badly broken. pyif Silver Maples and Poplars. During a severe storm in Washington, D. C., this summer it is stated that probably a thousand trees were badly injured. PW © £2 s c n a ArMineste Norway maple, su"gar maple, all the oaks, Oriental plane, or European syCAâ€" more, honey locust, most of the conifâ€" erous trees and ginkgo, were among those which were able to withstand the beating and bending which the storm caused for an hour or two. There are two trees, the silver maple and the cottonwood, which are more popular with the mass of treeâ€"planters than all other shade trees of America. Both have one fatal qualification, that of rapid growth. Losing sight of perâ€" manency and many more excellent qualâ€" ifications these two inferior trees are E]anted to the exclusion of all other rees. Both these trees are short lived, very much diseased, attacked by innumerable insects, while both are seriously damâ€" aged by windstorms. Poth require much water and send their roots into sewers, wells and cisterns, which they frequentâ€" ly destray. ‘There is a little tablet that taken internally removes the cause of Piles and cures any case of any kind no matter how long standâ€" ing. Pile sufferers know that Olntments and other local treatments sometimes relieve but never cure. They don‘t remove the cause. Plateâ€"Holder Must Be Handled by a Derrick. The largest camera in the world, three times as large as its nearest comâ€" petitor, is owned by Professor G., R. Lawrence, of Chicago, With it several noted pictures have been taken, includâ€" ing bird‘sâ€"cye views of factories avnd towns. _ It is also used for enlarging other pictures. _ dWcha A month‘s treatment costs $1.00. Ask for Dr. Leonhardt‘s Hemâ€"Roid (a theusand dollar guarantee goes with every cure). All deaters, or the Wilsonâ€"Fyle Co., Limâ€" ited, Niagara Falls, Ont. The body of the camera is nine fect four inches wide, six feet high, and 20 feet long, when fully extended, and in its construction over 30 gallons of glue were used. _ The lens is 12 inches in diameter and cost $1.500. _ All moving parts, including the curtain slide, run on roller bearings. The focusing is done by two panels of glass, which can be moved to all parts of the field. The plate bolder weighs nearly 500 pounds, when loaded, and is put into the camera by means of a derrick. Great care is used in loading, as a broken plate would result in the loss of $150. ‘The plates are made of plate glass, 8 feet in length by 4 feet 8 inches in widtb, and weigh 200 pounds. In order to dust the plates a man enters the camera through an opening in the front. _ A picce of ruby glass is then placed over the lens and the siide in the plate holder is withdrawn. After the plate has hbeen dusted, the slide is replaced and the man steps out. In making enlargements the focusing is done from the inside and the op»raâ€" tor remains in the camera during the exposure. In this process the entire apâ€" paratus is suppoirted by springs, which absorb any possible vibration.â€"Popular Mechanies. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. How to Get Into U. S. Navy. The new law opening to the sailors the avenues of promotion to the commissionâ€" ed ranks will have a tendency to attract the better class of our youth who are ambitious and whose ciroumstances have bared them from aportunities for adâ€" vancement in other directions. In 1901 Congress authorized the Secretary of the Nary to comission each year twelve sailors as wanrant officers. To receive this promotion a sailor must be less than thirty years old, must have been in the service seven years, served one year as a firstâ€"class petty officer, and pass an examination upon the theoretical part of his calling. This latter requireâ€" ment renmders it necessary for him to derp vote his spare tim+ to study. If he succeeds in this test he is given a tentaâ€" tive appointment as gunmer, boatswain, carpenter, or warrant machinist, and this duty beimg satisfactorily performed for one year, he becomes a warrant offiâ€" cer at $1,200 per year see pay, with an increase of $100 each year for three years. The fourth year his salary is $1,600, and after twelve years service reaches $1,800. At sixtyâ€"two years of age he is retired on threeâ€"fourths pay tor Those whose ambition reaches beyond the warrant officer can have it satisfied through faithful and intelligent attenâ€" tion to duty, as after four years‘ service in that capacity the aspirant is eligible to a commission, if recommended by his commandinng officer, and upon passang another examination. A bright and studious young man entering the navy as a sailor at seventem may in twelve or fifteen years bocomia commissioned officer, and retire at sittyâ€"two with the ranmk of captain.â€"Joseph Jenkins in 1esâ€" lie‘s Weekly. / Here lies the body of Mary Ann Lowder, Who died while dringing a seidlits powder; Called from the world to her future rest, She ought to have waited till it effervesced. Family Skeleton on View, go ‘ere and you shall go there; but when She (romantically)â€"The Robinsons | onee you are married, if you don‘t beâ€" have a skeleton in their family. long i': "im body and soul, why you gits He (absentâ€"mindedly)â€"Yes, I know. I it on the ‘ead. My big sister‘s -r&, saw him bathing this morning. and I know."â€"The. County Gentleman. THE BEST SHADE TREES. A Simple Cure for Piles. Beneath this stone, a lump of clay Lies Uncle Peter Dan‘els, Who early in the month of May, !Took offf his winter flannels. LARGEST OF CAMERAS. Willie Adam‘s gone from here, Willte‘s in a higher sphere; Kindly pause and shed a tear, Sir or madam. All diseases, every i1l, Came to trouble little Will; All we could, we didâ€"but still A Few Queer Epitaphs, District Agent Wanted ‘The English language was sitting in its corner of the ring, dazed but conscious. *"I corner of the ring but conscious, ‘But fools learn only by their own experience. See what he did to the Northern Pacific merger, the beef trust, the coal combinc, the Russoâ€" Japanese war, the ecrap in Central America, the folks without children and the man who wouldn‘t eat with a negro. I might have known that he would get me and reform me!" Room 19, 43 Scott Street Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. Minresota Man Reared and Trained Antlered Animals. _ Edward Crossman, of Ely, Minn., owns one of the oddest teams in America, says a St. Paul ‘despatch to the Chicago Inâ€" terâ€"Ocean. _ He has succeeded in the unusual task of breaking a pair of moose to drive is harness. In his sleigh Mr. Crossman spins about as rapidly behicd these animals as if drawn by a prancing span of horses. T The mogse were captured at Boear Isâ€" land Lake, a few milos to the southwest of Ely, three years ago. The mother had been killed by an Indian, and a trapper in the neighborhood, hearing the dog barking furiously, hurried to the spot, where he found two moose calves. Mr. Crossman bought these calves from the tranvner and secured a permit from the Governor to keep them in his possession. y ; is an THE CANADA FIRST MAGAZINE, now in its second year, adian MONTHLY Magazine. Devoted to CANADIAN sumn%rfS_ :t:c'l‘ STORIES. The magazine of the Canadian Préference League. O1 iNAI® eE en e e e e e S en e ie ip I WE WANT YOUR subscription. If you send your name in now for one Y lubocrirtion at one dollar, we will mail you the magazine: FREE for the ance of this year. onl * At first the moose didn‘t relish being hitched up, but as they are yorung in years they became accustomed to it much sooner than had they been full grown. Their antlers are now growing, and by the time these animals are five years of age they will be of large size. At first the problem of feeding them was no small one. When running wild they live on pond lily roots, leaves of trees or tender shoots of willow. At frist Mr. Crossman fed them willow twics and young birch. This became a difficult task, for they required about three wagonloads a week. Toâ€"day they eat hay, turnips and eabbace. and seems to enjoy the diet as much as the one to which they had before been gceustomed. One of the moose will eat as much as two horses. â€" They nibble at something most of the time except when lying down in the middle of the day. Each weighs about 700 pounds. IESUVowsy MmRTCIITWI CONSCNCa0 J time is rapidly coming when gociety must take charge of the nuisance of notse and regulate it. The savage, unbridled excesses now common can not be tolerated much long» er. The barbarian who unnecessarily swells the hideous discord to the mutilation of adjacent nerves will be jerked up and punâ€" ished like any other brawling disturber of the peace. Not Exactly. An English tourist on a visit to Ireâ€" land was accosted by his landlady one morning as follows: "I hope you slefr® well last night. sorr?" "Well, not exactâ€" ly, madam. I was troubled with an atâ€" tack of insomnia." Landlady (indignantâ€" i;f;fi’s a lie, sorr! TPH give you a sovâ€" ereign for every one you can find in the Before and After Marriage. A townâ€"bred board school girl told me she never intended to marry, and she based her resolve on the observation, "Before you marry, it‘s you shall ‘ave this and you shall ‘ave that, you shall Another of Roosevelt‘s Victims. Canada First Publishing Co,, Quality in Spoons, Knives and Forks Special attention is called to the following prices for heavy quality im a richly plain pattern that reminds one of oldâ€"time family sterling ware. HIGHEST quality and lowest price are combined in Plated Silverware from Diamond Hall‘sown DRIVES A MOOSE TEAM. We send upon request free of charge our large illustrated Catalogue. 4 To Secure Subscriptions on & Commission Basis. No one but a LIVE Agent need apply. Ryris Prus Gute Dessert Forks or â€" â€" _ 5.00 doz. ies â€" 4.50 doz. $3.00 doz. Address, Bleeding Piles Cured â€"after Years of Suffering. !! Miracleâ€"days may be patâ€"but the doy d | _ What is more ditressing than liching, Bleeding | Piles? Some eay the only cure is the knife. We | M:'-fl:h; dicking pain was sometimes almoil \ ambearable. Often I suffered so severely it was nesl to impossible to remain on duty. 1t was a hardshipte | ewalk,. I tried many remedics, but with poor sSuccest. | _ This winter, in New Yorkâ€"aithe Bench Show«â€" | I suffered greatlyâ€"was almost compelled to remain ; ds amy room. Itr ied several remediesâ€"without vretief, | _ * On my return home, Mira Ointment was advised. | Zmsedit. In only a short time, all the irritation and pain ceased. I can now walk with case and aitend y dutics as a w ~mber of the Fire Department, " I strongly recommend Mira Oiniment toanyone anffering from this annoying complaint. " Hamilion, March 9, 1906." l (Signed) _ Mark O‘Rourke, 186 Hess St. N. lan‘t that the sort of proof you want 2 ‘ Mr. O‘Rourke is the wellâ€"known breeder of bullâ€"teries dogs. Everyone in Hamilton knowshim. | Mira Ointment brings quick, lasting relief, and | pesmanently cures the worst cases of Piles, Eczema, UVlcers, Sores, Chaiing, Bumns and other skin woubles. 50c. a bozâ€"6 lor $2.50 At druggims‘ : â€"â€"aor from The Chemitts® Co. of Canada, Limited Children‘s Sayings. "I wouldn‘t cry like that if you," said a lady to little Alice. "Well, said Alice, between I "you can cry any way you like, is my way." _ n â€"“.{iâ€'hy", -ï¬'e!lie. there goes with two sisters, I thought had only one." "Well, she told me she had two halfâ€" sisters, «o I thought that was the sam* as one whole one." & Tenâ€"yearâ€"old Fred was g party for the first time. "Hore‘s a halfdoilar, Fre father; "if it rains be sure cab home." But Fred reached bome GTrenenes throuElL W i didn‘t you take a cab?" sanid his father. "I did, father," said Fred, "and 1 sat on the box all the way home. It was glorious." L s« a PW sancd en ced uds on o mes. "Now, Alec, don‘t be eelfish," said his mother, "baby is only going to play with your marbles for a little while." "No, mother, he‘s going to keep them always, if he can." o "Oh, no, dear." "I‘m sure he is, mother, ‘oos he‘s tryâ€" ing to swallow them."â€"Boston Globe. } * For years I had Piles, which protruded and bled eay, operations are unnecessary. . Read th/ letiers She had looked for bis coming as warriors come, With the clash of arms and the bugle‘s call; But he came instead with a stealthy tread, Which she did not bear at all, She bad thought how his armor would blaze in the sun, As he rode like a prince to claim his bride; In the sweet dim night of the falling night She found him at her side. She hed dreamed how the gaze of bis strange, bold eye Would make her heart to a sudden glow; She found in his face the familiar grace Of a friend she used to know. She had dreamed of his coming would: stir her soul, As the ocean is stirred by the wild storm‘s It t:trlte; h e brought her the baim of a calm, feavent?: And a peace which wned her life, wiix Wihoster Wileox. ‘Teacher Should Have Known. (Youth‘s Companion.) "Now, children, I want you to tell me what kind of clothes the kitty wears," said a kindergarden teacher at her fir lesson. Dead silence. e 5 C ol ‘‘Why, children, don‘t you know what kind of clothes the kitty wears?" Th. girls who used to elope with the eoachman must now transfer their atâ€" fections to the chauffeur. ‘The entnusiastic young woman had not anticipated such unresponsiveness, but, noâ€" thing daunted by the blank faces before her. she went back to the beginning, and tried the wontle art of instilling the right answer into the minds of her puplis by the method of elln&ln:{lon. it ‘‘Well, my ars, does the kitty wear feathers?" she asked. _ ‘Then a small boy in the front row leaned forward, and inquired earnestly, but with a touch of contempt in his volce: "Say, teacher, ain‘t you never seen a cat?" Look for the trademarkâ€" Farmers mt!-.lhirymen Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Mik Pan FIBRE WARE amcuss 1sS A MIRACLE!®" You will find they give you satisâ€" > - faction every time. THERE ISs NO SUBSTITUTE â€" Insist on being supplied with EDDY‘S every time â€"say Hamilton People Love‘s Coming. . B. EDDVYS ar, is an all Canâ€" °TS and SsHORT Of interest to all. now for one year‘s Fred," said is sethimu® TORONTO * oo 1906 m namone ) A" PictUrE Post CARDS | D/ PWY * 0 a uful‘a:nwlc:lflh.o:dl' ferent ; 500 for B assorted; 1,000 envelc c and 60¢c; 1,00 foreighn stamps . 235¢â€" a.mu.urupmd.'rmou OE " on mm t ..mâ€"' he "'u"‘.'mf aohe t 9 52. Dim â€" Pm« ootlc and is the best 'â€":-': ( oo ______commmnman high Valley Railroad, Ihursody, UA 4th. Tickets good 10 days. Good on regular express traina leaving Suspenâ€" sion Bridge 3.50 and 7:15 a. m., 7.15 and 8.43 p. m. t o o 1 ce io +0k Cootk ce > meaanttoatincrns FALL EXCRUSION TO NEW YORK. Tickets only $9.00 to New York and reâ€" turn, from Svnren-ion Bridge, via Leâ€" n n Vallev Railroad, Thursday, October 0.43 P» 20. For tickets, and further particulars, call on or write Robt. 8. Lewis, Passenâ€" ger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto. the Not long ago, however, the Chettaâ€" hoochee got too low for even hm draught commerce, and at Shoals a steamer grounded. As the drinkâ€" ing water on board needed replenishing, a deckhand was sent ashore with a couâ€" ple of water buckets. Just at this moment a Northern travy» eler approached the captain of <he Loat, and asked him how long he teoaght they would have to stay there. "Oh, only until that man gets tack with a bucket of water twur isto the river," the captain replied. Presently the deckhand returned an dthe stale waâ€" ter from the cooler was empti»d overâ€" board. Instantly, to the amazement of the traveler, the boat hegan to move. gasped The fact was that the boat, Mn’ the bottom, had acted as a dam, an: there was soon backed up behind her enâ€" ough water to lift her over the shoal and send her down the stream.â€"Harper‘s Weekly. Prophet Edmund S. Stevens of Washington says he has discovered the secret of the uniâ€" verse which has bafflied scientific men for all time. He doesn‘t boast when he said : "I just bave, that‘s all." And what is worse, this prophet of evil declares more earthquakes are coming. If you happen 10 live in 1989, when the final general shake~ down occurs, you will witness all the cities of all the nations laid low on the junk heap. Finally, from 2085 to 3144 A.D. the earth is to be in perpetpual perturbation, but in the latter year it will right itself to its upâ€" right position and the new heaven and the new earth then begin. Really, it‘s worth l omm * S oon, BVA * ;'-_ '-“".!. chndren x“’: s h 0 * on acthe t 1* T. . Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. MINXARD‘S LINTIMEXNT for Rheumatism and Sprains, as I have used it for both with excellent results. waiting for Frod: Sterry of the Paim Beach Power Boat Association, was talking about the high prices that motor boats and automobiles bring. ‘‘For my part,‘" he said, *L don‘t object to. these prices. ‘The workman is worthy ef his hire. Fine things, rare things, would not be fine and rare if they were cheap. "I thing the laborer is worthy of his hire, and 1 decline to sympathize with a grocer‘s clerk whom T once knew in the west. ‘"This young man had a very bustnessâ€" like scorn for hagglers and bargainers One day a woman entered the grocery and said: -;2:'& is the price of your cheapest butâ€" ** ‘Eightcen cents a pound, ma‘am, said the young man. woman. ‘Havren‘t you something cheapert? some soft somp at 6 cents a oo-.:.' eapee ** *Well,‘ said the young man, ‘we have The Cause of His Attention, Ellaâ€"When I was at the seashore one man was very attentive. Steliaâ€"I understand that you ti one of the waiters very llibcdly.â€"-m York Press. Minard‘s "Well, if that don‘t beat thund4ar!t" be Oh, that‘s Tn-)lou Times to A WELLâ€"KNOWN MAN. Yours Prices and Cheapmess. RY t 08 certainly too dear,‘" said the ty Lencthenin lows : the re confer cially Conter an eq+ Churct Confcerence d part viev has LaC G Jom and from Ham gatio unior odist hmu gre; lear tee t We triet enot terest i: for unik 1 t D W r W 1 Cl t1 1x an adjomrn Conference and that t Weslevan from the 1 and when union subje s1 D) }6 thor The W. . introduced | Ars. Ross chan, Hami h.d; Mrs. Williams, 3 Montreal. Fhey were their work Rev. J. T Manley Ber tic resolutic iastically. 1« Mrs. Ro: They repre church. "Of you are ver in the mult just forget of sight « true." of her the so The pre memorial®s Mn The Betore atform t« To Ge Wom it rety 4 Ma n t +«