&Â¥ R 11 5 Y J #4 + R "Ob, it‘s rery simple," sa "You just pres= a buttom â€" «@ppears at once."â€"Christian Easily Understood. "For instance," he said, "I don‘t know at all how the incandescent electric light is produced." "Oh, it‘s rery simple," said the lady. ow .. w kc LSY And shall a man be more just than God? Shall a man be more pure than his Maker? nor _ see my Maggieâ€"an‘ ye‘ll no‘ doot ‘at I love herâ€"raither nor see my Magâ€" gie do an ill thing, I‘d see her lyin‘ deid at my feet. But supposin‘ the ill thing ance dune, it‘s no‘ at my feet I wad lay her, but upo‘ my heart. wi my â€" auld arms aboot her, to haud the further ill off o‘ her." "But does he not punish sin?" "Would it be ony kin‘ness no‘ to punâ€" ish sin‘" No‘ to use a‘ means to pit aw‘ the evil thing frae us? Whatever may be meant by the place 0‘ misery, depen‘ upon‘t, Mr. Suthertlan‘, it‘s only anither form 0‘ love, love shinin‘ through the fogs o‘ ill, an‘ sae gart lewk something verra different thereby. Man, raither nor _ see my Maggieâ€"an‘ ye‘ll no‘ doot ‘at I love herâ€"raither nor see my Magâ€" se i D12 ud uw k DWP "But you seem to m that God is nothing but "Ab, nacthing but love "Because we are told t "Would he be lang in David had been speaking to Hugh of the character of God‘s mercy and love. Hugh says: The following extract from Macdonald‘s "David Elginbrod" es a clear apprehension of the d ture, and breathes the real < Christianity. exeruciating tortrue, rible of deaths, rathc loved Redeemer, who them from perdition, ment of their sins, inh ted, and by d ing for made thel{I i{:heriton Glory.â€"By a Banker. tlaying the animal, like hero, allowed his liberty, and all were willing to s excruciating tortrue, and Lhao ® 4 1 Nes C is Cl here a more virile C Apostle St. Paul himse self against a wild be sluviny the ani‘mael f But, of more sinister the proscenium is a narr whence, it is stated. th eP td NE EE Url\lflr‘ plants, the visitor enters the old Greek amphitheatre, (or rather Roman, for, except some fine granite columns, little Grecian architecture is apparent). From the upper galleries of this imposing relie of an age long passed away the prospect is indeed beyond measure superb and magnificent. On the one side stretching down to the long line of that beautiful, indented and rockâ€"girt sea coast, garden after garden radiant in all their glory of fruit and flower; on the other, the towâ€" ering and threatening snowâ€"capt pyramid of Etna, perhaps belching forth dense volumse of smoke and steam, perhaps for a time almost quiescent and gatherâ€" ing force for a renewed outburst; while benesth is the great arena where the tragedies and comedies of Euripides, oï¬ Nophocles, or of Aristophanes were wont to be performed. Us And now the proceeding along tus and hibiscus Amongst ail the many beautifully sitâ€" vated towns in Europe, Taormina, on the east coast of Sicily, has the reputation of taking first place, both for picturâ€" esqueness of position and for the exâ€" treme beauty of its surroundings. Landâ€" ing at the harbor of Catania, the visitor proceeds by train past square miles of lemon trees heavily loaded with goiden fruit, and past a succession of the most lovely land and seaâ€"scapes. Arrived at length at his destination the visitor comâ€" mences the ascent of the mountain side upon which, high up toward the clouas, the ancient town is perched like an eagle‘s nest. Every turn in the zigrag road opens up a fresh vista of beauty ; lovely bays and arms of the sea; jutting promontories, and rocky, treeâ€"clad istets or picturesque glens, even in early spring revelling in a wealth of luxuriant floral radiance. and by dying for them > them inheritors of God‘s Love for Love does not grow on every tree, Nor true hearts yearly bloom, Alas, for those who only see This cut across a tomb! But, soon or late, the fact grows plain To all through sorrow‘s test: The only folks who give us pain Are those we love the best. i P EiL ddntity w iy in Outprictssetath; â€" Stca Are oft to strangers shown; The careless mien, the frowning face Are given to our own, We flatter those we scarcely know; We please the fleeting guest; And deal full many a thouchtlace 1 The choicest garb ine man you thoroughly despise Can rouse your wrath, ‘tis true, Annoyance in your heart will rise At things mere strangers do ; But those are only passing ills, This rule all lives will prove: The rankling wound which aches and thrills J4hney say the world is round, and yet 1 often think it square ; Bo many little hurts we get From corners here and there, But one great truta in lire I‘ve found While journeying to the West: agy â€"â€" K jOuE " " _ Ceal full many a thoughtless blow To those who love us best. Is dealt gy bhands we he only folks who Are those we love iths, rather than de perdition, bora heart, wi‘ my auld to haud the further ill but love, what for no‘*"* are told that he is just." e lang just if he didna bntto= ~=+ the râ€"hg Christian Registor. _the town is reached, and along a path lined with cac iscus and other subâ€"tropicai visitor enters the old Greek @, (or rather Roman, for. On Etua‘s , inherited and Those We Love Best. but love." His Children, ‘ness no‘ to punâ€" means to pit aw‘ Whahver_ may ast‘s attack in order to save vho really wound love the best, to make out that valiant But they one iffer the most the most horâ€" the sweetest grace and commitâ€" on the cross, the land of meaning, near T _ marlyt‘s rhiteâ€"bearded leopards; or an, like the fending himâ€" the punish _ expressâ€" divine naâ€" ny their love â€"Belected. of bi 200 t CRTRTCTE ‘‘My proposition," he went on, "is to petiâ€" tion the British government and to get it to approach the United States government also with the object of detaching a section of the fleets of both powers to undertake the work after the several countrics interested have given pledges and euch securities as may be considered adequate. ""If the icafield of the Arcotic be stranded on one large island or on two emall ones, beâ€" sides comding against the north of Greenland, I would propose to break up the ice by start. | ing in to work at the east of Greeniand and then proceeding north and west. ‘The work ‘ could also be commenced at the head of Davis strait and Bering strait. } ‘‘The work of breaking up the ice could, I believe, be done by shooting great torpedoes under the ice, so fired that they would exâ€" plode at a considerable distance. Ice floating ; on the surface, as the ice in the Arctic ocean doea, would be very eaay to break up, as exâ€" periments have proved. "And once broken up the ice east of Greemâ€" land would flow out into the Arctic and melt. Irthowhobma.ofbeme found to float out when its connection with Greenland wore severed we ahould probably have to depond on the Davis and Bering straits to convey it away. "I might point out to you that when thi« scheme of mine has been carried out, as it will be some day, the area of habitable land in Canada would be more thatn double that of the whols United States. Moreover, Greenâ€" land, with a mild climate, would unquest fonâ€" «bly become valuable, and you can depend mpon it that the United States would try to | . get possession of it in that case." Li were to be removed the warm . the Atiantic would immediately That thin fce coating would ra pear," But how to do it? Mr. McLennan recognizes that clearing away the ice obstruct channel connecting &ie two ocea: too great magnitude for any one to uw single handed. "The F fce a day _ " 0 C#X 1000 cubic miles of _ ice a day. ‘*That is to say, in four or five years this would melt all the ice in the Arctic ocean, an dCanada from being a country of vigorâ€" ous winters would become almost semitropiâ€" uludnuwohndwhlchgmbumm vast areas to the north of us would share in that climate and become habitable." ‘ By means of much mental application, porâ€" ing over maps, charts and scientific worlts, Mr. McLennan has, he believes, found out what the barrier is which stopped the curâ€" rent between the two oceans. More than that, he has, he declares, solved the problem of removing that barrier. He works it out in this way: "After the glacial period there was a time when the Arctic ‘:u a great open ocuI: with quite a large ico cake near the pole. was then gradually disappearing, just as it is now. vnutln-umotusoeethbocamo detached from it imoorings and drifted her and thore‘ over the Arctic ocean. ¥€ KBgam Aorase CCC 1W 4 0000 ACCTATRC CROU 220 Arcle oceans formerly flowed. ‘‘*Now, precise scientific calculations will show you that a current flowing through this channel at the rate of four miles an hour and at a temperature ten degrees above freezing polnt would allow of sufficient water to pass through to molit 1,000 cubic miles of lco_g day., _ 1t is a scientific fact which you can verity by consulting any together that in the bed of the Atlantic there is & channel on the east side extending from south of the equator northward and passing between the Faroe and Shetland islands at a depth of 670 fathâ€" ams. Thumhqbomssomfleo wide and I believe that it is through this channel that the current between the Atlantic and the Arclc oceans tnrm..;. "m_ ul _What caused the once open ocean north of Canada to be turned into . field? Beyond doubt the fact that th ocean current which at one time flow« the Atlantic into the Arctic became i b)"‘_oqme barrier, CE oPny Tmn L " 7 1we. "WFere it not for the modifying t‘;flu- ences of this great stretch of open ocean the wlnlun in Europe would be of arotic seâ€" verity. de us ima m.ill_ z0000 5# In the m Iattitude as the British Isles, the #outh Grenland corresponds in this particular Norway and Newftoundland to the north France. Were it not for tha maaiyt HOR ich thean @ _ 2l°CC_ lhe mild winter in which these fossil trees once lived?" he asked, and he answered the question himself. "Undoubtedly," he said, "‘it was caused by a greater stretch ofownmwmmh than now aviees 3 3000 CVeel « 2L onl y 001 CCCE DIUCHE The great flood of Noah‘s time undid al this. It made North America a land of bleak winters and scorching summers, It blocked mmmmwmmmmtm warm waters of the Atiantic from leaving those iceâ€"blocked northern shores. All this, tndd,mon. has been Mr. McLennan‘s life study, He apeaks about it frankly. His arguâ€" ments ecem unanswerable. As he tailked «bout his plan with a writer to the World Magazine he grew enthusiastic. ‘"Now what caused the mild winter in which these fossil trees once lived?" he ASked. and ha ancwames j _ "_"~C UVOU! _ Lord Kelvin has been consulted and will reâ€" _port later. Minister Oliver has communicatâ€" ed with Mr. McLennan, informing him that homaybeenmun.gedlnhuocbqnaud asking for more particulars. Once upon a time, as geology plainly provâ€" es, Nonth America enjoyed as balmy a climate as there was in the world. The remains of mammoths and trees and semitropic shrubâ€" berymtobotounduxsbng the edge of the Arctic circle and in northern Siberia. The great flood of Noah‘s time undid all this. It made North America a land of bleak winters and scorching summers, It blocked wmah-nnelwqurwutht the warm waters of the Atiantic from leaving those iceâ€"blocked northern shores. All this, :tndd’mwe. has been Mr. McLennan‘s life udy. ‘"What an opinion C t merty The plan has just been presented to the Canadian Parliament. It involves the aid of the United States as well. It is now in the bands of Frank K. Oliver, minister of the inâ€" MorbrtboDom.lmonolCamda. He has kone over it very carefully, and as proof of his own conviction that it is possible he has communiâ€"ated the details to several scienâ€" tists ?!‘world-wlï¬o fame with a request for Undo the awful uork’g Noah‘s %i change North America into a semitrop paradise, make Minncstots and North Daâ€" I kota and Manitoba and Winnipeg like to California or the Carolinas, destroy our winters within five years. ‘That is the legislation before the Canadian parliament toâ€"day. It isn‘t a dream of a luâ€" mnatic. !t is as bardâ€"headed a proposition as ever legislators considered. ‘The scheme, in & word, is for the United States and Canada to unite to destroy the rigors of the North American winter by blasting out the chanâ€" nolbcwcantbeAn-ueandu:cAuu.nue. melt the longâ€"sunken ice and allow the warm current from the milder Atlantic to permeate | the frozen fastnesses of the Arctic. The plan is R. A. McLennan‘s. | He lives in Russell, Manitoba, where it is | . notmn‘tom&homwurydownwwbe- low zero on a cold winter‘s morning. He is | .hrmcroachhgewde,ooeofc.nuh'l rich men. His hobby is to make all North { America a continent with very mild winters C tn_t_!‘hu_ torrid summers. natic. It is as bardâ€"headed a proposition as ever legislators considered. ‘The scheme, in & word, is for the United States and Canada to unite to destroy the rigors of the North American winter by blasting out the chanâ€" nel between the Arctic and the Atlantic, melt the longâ€"sunken ice and allow the warm current from the milder Atlantic to permeate the frozen fastnesses of the Arctic. The plan is R. A. McLennan‘s. He lives in Russell, Manitoba, where it is nothing to see the mercury down to 40 beâ€" ow zero on a cold winter‘s morning. He is | nhmcron.himamle,mol(hnm'l ich moen. His hokhe as an L123 0_ MeNEm h+ af 10 0 mmmmenenmemmmmmemmmenmmmmmmemmen “"""""’â€â€â€â€â€œâ€œ'M benator Clark also studied in the & l gama aak~~ 100 uen @ to P meeh C now exists. Labrador is in the Copper Kings." (Chicago Chronicle.) e fact that the great one time flowed from rctic ‘became impeded 220 ARCCTS TDMCD OP or five years this the Arctic o?e.u, country of vigorâ€" almost semitropiâ€" stretches in such ‘ us would share habitable." application, porâ€" _scientific worls l TORONTO As he tailked to the World he was dowbly bleseod when aingle blessedrcss, RUZey 23. 5 NC ,, CEOLNer representativ, every calling in the land. Every p“.-h.of ishes all business from his mind as soon as he reaches a ball field. ‘There he is free from all care. ‘The only solicitude he has is that the home nine will win. It is easy to understand why the popular national game. It i game, hence it will never lack and admirers. It is a very dem time. It brings together repres to the ‘‘Why, she wouldn‘t engage herself t young Winkler until she bad agked bim howo he got all his money. And when he told her that he got it from his father she said that was ail rightâ€"she was afraid he Might haws mewras ameus y us earned zome of it." An Aristocratic Y (Cleevland Plain ‘‘Mabel is a perfect a comes to pride.‘" ‘"How so?" +4 Pul TL aindhcdli 2. c Gown too much alrady.‘ As you at he sits he has to look up. And if euch a thing as business hypnotism ture that‘s the time when it gets work ** When Selling Goods. (Kansas City Stap, i A auccessful saleseman who was discusg. ing the principles underlying his line of busiâ€" ness made the remark: ‘‘Never go into & customer‘s store and sit down while you are trying to sell him goods. Let him sit down if he wants to, but you stand up and fire the stuff at him. If he offers you a chair say: ‘No, I thank you, I have ‘been sitting down too much alraav> 1 _0 7°°n si " of to for 1 a married The High Clergy of England Complaining of Magnificent Poverty, Not so many years ago the Bishop of London was more than contented with his plutocratic lot; now he is complainâ€" ing that his pay of $50,000 a year is not sufficent to keep him and the palaces which are thrust upon him. The present bishop is a bachelor, and has no pleaâ€" sure upon the rows and rows of rooms he has to keep in order; but an unsoâ€" phisticated one would think that $50,000 a year would would do it. He is not alone, however, in his complainins T. Popularity of Baseball |__"Mr. Bigelow, you have a great deal of < property in Montana which is subject to | the same kind of litigation as that which you say you will thrust upon me.> If | your programme is fight, you will find that I am prepared. Before you and I have finished, 1 will give you a fight that will be heard of from one end of this continent to the other." That Heinze kept his word and made good his threat everyone knows, and . Connolly‘s description of that fight which became the fight of the Amalgamated when they took over the Boston comâ€" panies, is absorbing. Not the least inâ€" teresting portion of the battle came about when Clarke selected Heinze for his "vindication" and made him his lieuâ€" tenant in his political campaign for reâ€" election to the Benate. The spectacular campaign that Heinze waged for Clark and his ultimate success reads like the lines of an extravaganza, and sets forth "practical politics" in its most exagger. ated form. ; same school, by the | tails of his early m companies wh ing the Rarus * PUr. Harcourt, himself the son , was wont to talk about a way that indicated that their wealth did them no spiritual ) conversations on this subject tn > Mlansedl MUL l lc T i w2 CCB CUPCEL i to that which was helped Anthony Trollope‘s _ clerical "hen the Bishop of Winchester ce, was able to buy from the of his sees, without feeling the necessary miles of frosh aav. THE PAY OF BISHOPS of is‘ a " j C WBYâ€"ygives the deâ€" of his carly mining operations in ana, his memorable raid on Canâ€" and his sudden return from his dian successes, to Montana to proâ€" h'i.' Rarus mine from the Raatam man mb.u ‘ht hevar 11.,.0 CVOrÂ¥one‘s _ never lack SUpporters a very democratic pas. TT OhaAi: wp ol .0 o c o 13 9 Ce n pleased John Morley, but | to be discreetly silent in of Gladstone. The bishops ad another point of view. Bishop of London, not this Globe.} Dogz CCR y HVT UHLS ig in the suburbs in his e, when to him, from an , approached an old woâ€" "ecause $75,000 a year will im. _ The Bishop of Winâ€" $36,000 a year, and cannot big palace on it. All this s heard on the intimation nt intends cutting down the sâ€"a reform being thraat Young Person F o gz 20 _ O0" .. 97 SHCml, the best thing that Heinze was to sell out to them for they offered. Heinze\zeplied 60 tokes snn ds 4) nsl be ‘arus mine from the Boston who owned properties adpoinâ€" rua a Dealer.) aristocrat when ‘UCs you a chair ave ‘been sitting s you stand and And if there is zpnotism in naâ€" ~ ce C Ar mE ced president of the \Boston you have a great deal of 4 ~~ 4C & g "°C. Lhe spectacular rinze waged for Clark success reads like the Aganza, and sets forth ‘ in its most exaggerâ€" he enjoyed companies claimed that basebal1 e said that might have which is subject to "apexed" in their in its it A Trait of Johns Hopkins. (Philadelphia Record.) ; Honesty was evidently one of the fundaâ€" mental traits of the character of Johns Hopkins, founder of the great institution at Baltimore which bears his name. On one occasion, he was sent by his mother to borâ€" row a flatiron of a neighbor. The good neighbor gave him the flatiron and at the eame time offered him a piece of pie. ‘‘No, thank you. I don‘t want any â€" pie,‘‘ eaid the redâ€"faced boy, as he started home. Halfâ€"way there the ple and his conscience were too much for him. He wheeled aboxt and knocked again at the neighbor‘s door, his face redder than ever. ‘"‘I told you a story,‘‘ he explained; "I did want that pie.‘" _ His wife, he will tell you, was 17 when he first met her; the number of the house to which he took her when they _ were married was 17; his present house bears the same number doubled, and the first spade was put to the work of rebuilding it on August 17 1883. It was on Nov, 17 that he and his family first took up â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"@#§â€"â€"â€"â€"_ Minard‘s Liniment Lumberman‘s Friend, 2 e C HRW boomondinendittes 4. _A Made of Carbon Wire,â€" rmit‘o COILED â€" -ku!tmm:)mlnlu"“m“ t stays t.l't?l Painted Wnï¬tl‘l"g T H E PAGE WIRE TFELN CE COM PA > v Bir Lawrence Alma‘Tadema, the guished painter, is a strong bel the luckiness of numbers. His number is 17. "PAGE FENCGES to them, © msC NOP y liisies uind :4 4 "I‘ve traded with you for 20 years." "Always paid your bills, perhaps?" "Of course." "That accounts for it," said Mr. Lawâ€" rence. "I know the others." "I‘ve introduced to Abbot Lawrence, says the Boston Herald. "Mr. Smith?" said Mr. Lawrence, with a musing air, "I don‘t think I know you, do I1?" "Well, you ought to," was the reply. Tiin ArnAAA eistetec Lo ols e C C W An upâ€"country business man introduced to Abbot Lawrence Boston Herald. So aniline dyes are not injurious tq health! We can continue to eat our "gilt edge" butter wilhout a qualm, but with the commissioncrs on foods sancâ€" tion to color eatables the table will son resemble the rainbow. _ For why stick to yellow butter? Why not blue ’or green to mateh the flora} decorations? There is already a call for red butter in Washington, D. C., and it would be loveâ€" ly to have the tiny golden balls purple ones, for of course the earrotâ€"fed cow wont care what color the halfâ€"fed cow‘s butter is dyed, and purple and yellow make a lovely combination.â€"Bmtonl Herald. Ask for Minard‘s ;nd take oo 0o o or es ueste to kick the earth away from him and grab hold of the cireumambient atmosâ€" phere and pull himself into another and pleasan\ler exnvironment without unnecesâ€" sary‘ delays, procrastinations or what the old Latin writers used to call monâ€" key business. Given that impulse to move and the laws of gravitation become void and a man car track around a streak of lightning and goon for thirty or forty yards without much trouble. What Sanâ€" tosâ€"Dumont reeds is less ecience _ and more enthusiasm in his work.â€"-Emporin, Kan., Gazette. Alma â€" °C lhoubie with Mr. Santosâ€"Dumont is that he trusts to science and not inâ€" spiration. No man can fly unless he has to. One can‘t sit down and determine to flfy and fly. To fly and to make a go of it one must feel an impelling desire in iak ‘Whas nexage O 10 AorC20m ed " ho smwitse gly 02000 CCCC" Temedies 4 hours after the Jrat opitication I fot Eniar Lt It has worked wonders }vr me," Don‘t put it ofâ€"get a box of Mira Ointment at once and be relieved, Price 50c.â€"6 for $2.50. At dnnvfm'â€"or from ‘The Chemifis‘ Co, af Cramude T1 IT . kee °P0 O CCCT MRWISIENED, other en voub EspmA N Homtom ve., N. oys "T.:“;a...a vesks 'H'lmpa.l._ ay w Im Why is it that whenever you are looking for anything you always find it in the last place you look? Because you always stop looking when you find it. _ _Why is a fly the best one amon grocers‘ customers? Because, whe comes for sugar he settles on the If a twoâ€"wheeled wagon is a b and a threeâ€"whecled wagon is a tri what would you call a fiveâ€"wheeled A Vâ€"hicle, of course. What is the sure sign spring? A cat watching a wall with her back up. Why is a Chinese never Because no matter where h self he always has his cue. Why is a fly the best one 12 / i 52t could not pessibly be seen in a dark room? An Israelite. Why is St, Paul like a white horse? Because they both like Timothy. Who first introduced salt meat into the navy ; Noah, when he took Ham into the Ark. â€"Tadema‘s Lucky Number. wiite toâ€"day, P=tioustt & OKâ€"~ ELITE _ DRESSMAKING scnoor He Knew the Others RIDDLES. What light could not Butter Colored to Suit ‘231, C3C8 are not injurious to We can continue to eat our e" butter without a qualm, but _commissioncrs on foods sancâ€" color eatables the table will ho ie 4e 1200 H DRESSMAKING SCHOOL What an Aeronaut Lacks. P. 0. BOX 91 _ Dunoas, onr TRADE MARK AZGistcago Miss cat watching a hole in the the sure sign of an early mks ca uk 00 2. C T puus c se s l Vatens, Instructor adema, the distinâ€" strong believer in bers. His lucky ter where he finds him has his cue. y from him and nambient atmosâ€" into another and without unnecesâ€" best one among the TE no other, was ones €, Whe; he on the spot. is a bicycle is a tricycle, perplexed ? ; when he hacd the op('xrutl:()nâ€"â€"]-ie;fon ‘ Waggâ€""No; but I am told he did n uons d ns C t i en d n CBPA he naid the: d‘oâ€"t"to.r when "wire edge," which hapens amateur, The stropping of a razor is more importâ€" ant than more men consider it On _ the etropping depends dircetly the health and longevity of the tool. Most men know the stropping imotion; the only fault is â€" that they do not employ their knowledge often | enough. | ‘The honing of the blade is of the highest importance. Nine tenths of the self shay â€" ,eu hone their razors themselves, and nineâ€" tenths of these hone them the wrong way. , Even the majority of barbars, who are supposed to know, use the old fashioned, laborious, and unsatisfactory method of honâ€" ing. They dra.v'\ruxe razor across the hone 'wlth the edge. ‘The proper way is to draw 1t gaainst the edge, and thus save time by getting the greatest cutting force from the Tool. Here are the proper directions for honing & razor: To bring a dull razor to an edge, dip light side of rub stone in cold water (do not use bot water), rub on hone until you create a thin lather; lay razor perfectly flat, . so that both back and edge touch the hone; draw razor across the hone from heel to . point against the edge; hone in this way until your razor is sharp. Test razor on thumb nail. If it adheres from heel to point, then you have an edge. Honing after these directions it is immnesimu. _ C Mer ‘When a man is Gone shaving, especialâ€" ly if he is in a hurry, he pute up his razor without even wiping it off. Then, when ho wiashes to use it again, he takes it from the wié applies it to his face. z majority of men who shave themâ€" €» not strop their blades oftener tha; emce a week. This is ruinous to the edge, for, being constructed like a saw, the so confined particles of hair clog up the testh and not only hinder the razor from doing Its work properly, but also rust the edge. ‘The proper way to shave is to use a sideâ€" wise, slanting, sawing motion. Where â€" is less difficulty in the cutting in this way, and practically no ‘"‘pull," unless the razor is in extremely bad condition. The man who Jgarns to shave himself will invariably pick up a razor aud pull directly and forciâ€" bly down his cheek. The man who has learned from one who knows uses the sawâ€" ing motion, and saves much time and trouâ€" ble, as well as his skin. one? is found to be made up of litite teeth, s regular and fine. ir lcunotsenen.lyknowntusnnr works on the same principle as a saw. Unâ€" der a magnifying glass the edge of a rAzor Mange, Prairie Scretches and eontagious Itch on human or in 30 mirrtes by Wolford‘s 8 _ Until quite recently the value of vanadium was greater than pure gold, owing to searcity and cost of extraction from other minerals, but now it is about the sfa.me as silver. owing to the discovery of a big deposit near Lima, Peru. It has not yet m found elseâ€" where in any large quantity, mer euccessful home treatment, with fuil instructions. Send no money but write her toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures eduits and aged people troubled with urine ifficulties by day or night. Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€" wetting. ‘There isâ€"a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her esuccessful home treatment with +. W L OR PCE PARTUCT WE to his brotherâ€"inâ€"law, Jrimes I. of Enngg- land, and presumably furnished Shakesâ€" peare with the name for the Rosenkrantz of his "Hamlet." Furthermore, the ent Baron Rosenâ€" krantz was himaelr"l:om at Elsinore, where are laid the principal scenes of the famous tragedy. His line has always been distinguished for its learned men and Baron Palle has made his mark in the army and as a magistrate in addiâ€" tion to being ranked as the leading livâ€" ing novelist of Denmark. "The Magisâ€" trate‘s Own Case" is considered one of | ho Oe Taaint n his best works BETTER THAN SPANKING Transatlantic Tales for May contains & novel by a man one of whose ancasâ€" tors was a Shakespearian character and had a speaking acquaintance with Hamâ€" let, though they were not on very friendâ€" ly terms. Tht is to say, Baron Palle Rosâ€" enkrantz, the author of "The Magisâ€" trate‘s Own Case," is descended from . the learned Holger Rosenkrantz, who . came as an envoy from the Danish kingl in <hife Inroviine ts l x e e i OP â€"Did Closelist take PROPER CARE OF A RAZOR C io ou Pesiics .c h i h ic 'und many fishermen visit the place durâ€" ing the spring and summer. Fish fries and picnics are held there, but the maâ€" jorit yof the people who attent these gaâ€" therings little dream that a half cenâ€" tur yago a large village stood on the 3“’“'12" which is now covered by the lake. «& ienss . se 2 & PE CE â€"safest regulator for baby. Prevents colic and vomitingâ€"givea healthful rest â€"cures diarrhoea without the harmful effects of medicines containing opium or other injurious drugs. s2 25c.â€"at drugâ€"stores. Cures N.do';::lncr:‘: Ch:# i ., Limnit Diarrhoea‘=c.= The lake where the old town formerl stood is teeming with many kinds of fis y Te e e ue e m Eo were entirely lost. It is said that the town sunk almost in a night and that the merchants didn‘t have time to reâ€" move their stocks of goods. mna c 4o % 1 . ' Lhere are still living a number of old 'citizau who remember when it was dry Fifty years or more ago a prosperous country village stood on the epot where the lake now is. The town was called Oakville, and it was one of the most imâ€" portant places in this section of the State in those days,. SBuddenly the land on which the town was located commencâ€" ed to sink, and finally about twenty acres went down, carrying with it nlll the buildings, and many stocks of wocds pthaine verst? veizhenr ns S wl.4 Decatur correspondence Nashville PBait Value of Vanadium, ~not crimped. ‘This Nurses‘ and Mothers‘ Treasure ITCH !‘cnlvdhwdb'ycnh e an edge. Honing after is impossible to get a Related to Hamlet bill . over â€" LIMITED, by to performed *" he did when us to the edge, & saw, the so 0g up the teoth zor from doing rust the edge. s to use a sideâ€" tion. (There â€" is § in this way, nless the razor lon. ‘The man will invariably ectly and forciâ€" man who â€" has many stocks of goods d every form of r animals cured Sanitary Lotion. Montreal, <«g3â€" WEAR .BEST" raz», [ «28 â€"* in mear uns id ieeeenatil dealors to orect 1. Leadcal io eatme eP a word to showhat you don‘t .’-;;l A what you‘re tang about."â€"Atlanta ; ters Constitution. _ | new Tantalg Man. "I see by the p#" said.Mrs. Blinks at the breakiast t, "that a delegation of women suffrag» is coming to this country," | Mr. Blinks saidthing. it Wak "And they‘re to invade Washâ€" ington and make{pflech to the Presiâ€" dent, and all." Blinks still sil¢ "I declare," sngd the lady. "You‘re the most tantalig man in existence. There you sit lik statue never saying The E. B. EDDY CO CHIPMANâ€"HLTON KNITTING co In thre and sixâ€"foot rolls, is unexcelled for al building an poses,inside walls ofmh&qMM“ J GET OUR PRICES,. . y Minard‘s Linimented by Physicians. Duchessns PriSCilla Fine Hostery For Ladics Strongs Gibraltar Limit of Strength P11CeSS Feyptian Lie For Children‘s Fine Dress "They could not 4 much of it durâ€" ing the excessively weather on acâ€" count of the stickisggether ,and they could safely finishin cold weather, but they were neagyo months laborâ€" ing under such unff@ble weather conâ€" ditions that they g not finish it. It may not be gener understood that finishers must havright, sunshiny weather to lacquerther, and when we are deprived of tipverything is held under suspension.‘tom the Shoe and Leather Reporter. Bad Weather/Tanners. A manufacturer ofnt side leather remarked: "I can & state that nevâ€" er since patent leathas become the staple which 1 belig is have finishâ€" ers been so confrontith such weathâ€" er cond.itiong as duithe past winter. "0P â€"as in mor " tpovriensod te I cured a horse of ;:v'e“ing with MINARD‘s LINTME]) Bathurst, N. B. 1IW. PAYNE. I eured a horse, t by a pit fork, with MINARDS3MENT. St. Peter‘s. _ C. B, . LINLIEF, I cured a horse ol‘it"‘ge with MINARD‘sS LINDMEX _ _ CHRISTOPHHUNDERS. HULL Agencies in all principal "I have been sentenced 9 Y®2*8 and I want to bq{in geryijsentence as soon as possible." Supt. Trelford was u ucep: the man as a prisoner mol:;. no commitment papers. < ed Gonzales left thl:u;r' after an hour returned with his m;:“s’:.' pers duly signed and i then placed in a cell to S@rViDE 4 two years spnum__sre New Mexican. ‘ Felix Gonzales, of Socorf°N°°C to a term of two years in"Ute": tiary on w charge o{ assaul d“‘:i ly weapon and whose caseMPP® was decided in favor of th| °°** had some difficulty in gett®? PM son. As soon as he heard »* SuUP reme Court had affirmed®"tenc* of the lower court he we eé)em- tentiary near this city an upt. Trelford : * Dalhousie Little Darling aas Little Pet r., Infants Lambs‘ 'oolnfl"l'b Al Wool m'WIWMhMTn‘.â€.. t 606 ale en anlmudeedanan c IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING AS] YOUR DEALER FOR ETT -â€"-l--' . Tas -lt-"o'&'ï¬.....' """""‘ug-:bmn Leads ali it 1907 prices befere orville, Toronto, Maasa... . * U p Wanted to Get Into Saves A ‘The starch thatne be cooked..that v stick . . that gives a liant gloss with ah by a pitch need »»_LIMITED, HAMILTON, ontaArio, new ones "Do you know, Mrs. Hadley, that only illustrates the old saying that one can g.r‘nuoomeï¬ing of anybody.â€"Boston Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the bhouse. President Hadley, of Yale, not long entertained at dinner the son of one :rhiu classmates, the youth being a Yale freshman. The conversation turned to football, and what the president had to say on the subject was news to the freshman, who realized the fact with conmsiderable surprise. He listemed for some time, and then said to Mre. Hadâ€" ley, condescendingly enough : Removes all hard, soft or calloused lurmpe It is not sufficiently recognized that agriculture is a scientific pursuit and that in order to get the very best reâ€" [tum out of it a man could to advantage utilize a special scientific education as 'truly as does the doctor or lawyer or ’the engineer. It is not merely because of the increased material return that such education for the farmer is of value. The intellectual and moral dividends would by means of such training be equally increased. It is a great loss in human power and happiness that thouâ€" sands of men engaged in one of the most scientific of rnr-uiu should go about it without getting the same moral and inâ€" tellectual satisfaction that comes to men in other callings in which the professional element has been more consciously recog» nized.â€"Boston Transcript. and blemishes from horees, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, oo,m., etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warâ€" ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. arrived i8 EDP "M"°°°~ l1.+ and the l798.|lqtlttbehohl-thtulth follovhc'n‘lgt‘iudon the morning of the 1l1th quietly out of it to slay the monster Marat. ‘The bedroom is still pointed out which the Norman heroine occupied, and some regret is felt that the place has to be demolished. But the march of progress is merciless. The buildings are needed to extend the Rue de Louvre, and seen human feet will tramp on the lrot where the Norman heroine slept her last calm sleep of maiden freedom. â€"London Globe. [ 18114 4 h .. bfhpes ~4lintt It now is the Rue d‘Argout. is the Hotel de la Provider arrived in Paris from Cae 1793, slept at the hotel on following nmt. and on th the l1ith quietly ou the monster Marat. ing tk't now, anQ of antique city the little TO‘ u Corday found a fle she entered the C death. _ _ £ dealh. It stands on the street which pricf °0 the days of the revolution been known as that of the Vieux Augustins. VBWZP ©* 20 _2 Tha hnilding ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Amenmeemmemmenmmmemeeee 2 0000 mmwwm A‘deoldhrhkm' e "* * "_s the latest bits Compliment for President Hadley. woman more â€" B eRned‘ s Sm d c 1 Kendall‘s Spavin Cure has noequal. MontrEAL, P.Q., Sept. t2, ‘06. "I have the mJl &-hud&u- and have used your remedies, which always proved Infalltble.* D. Raillergeron. Be 'nrudâ€"m Kendal!‘s alweys tn the stable. Our book "Treatise on the Horse® free from dealers or ISSUENV. 19, An Infallible Cure ~For Spreins, Ringbone, Splint, Curb, en miotchest and Soft Bunohes, CANADA Hint of Strong Sentiment. _enjoys reading old love let than a #hfm enjoys writing Scientific + Limited y NO P 0 °M bcimactin ie city to be threatened is r“ upon which Charlotte a fleeting place of rest as the city on her errand of and lining pur on Juily 9,