"Nor' alte replied. “Randi-Rs I I!!! thought stingy, I suppose; but I have learned that unlluarily t get more en- joyment out of tmt' flower or a few than many. There " propriety in all things. I would not think of sending a single flower or a tiny bunch to a debutante. for instance: I would gtt the blggogt my an: would afford. but when it is Ptere- f',' a token od remembrance. and ‘I think of um and wish yo! Well: of one Woman to'nnother. I prefer a few. If it is n format nthttr the In: must rule. It is the Moms! â€who. of it that I like for one thins-d lug-other the beauty of the now." tho-chat I have I use “bathtub-Winn!- I "vetintutm-lthl-r. Two '0‘" spoil it.'u-Biht m. frien day. .. - W. ...,. like so many others--'" have finished my dayU work" but I eannot "r- " have finished my life." My dark work will begin again the next morning. The tomb is not a blind alley: it is n thor. ougilare. It closes in the twilight to open with the dawn. I improve - hour became I love, this world no my Fatherland. My work in only I. begin- ning. My monument is hard? above " foundation. I would be Gl? to no it mounting for ever. The thirst for the h.. rmito nrov. inftnitr.-arL.e,,,. "..- to brighten 1 , mun in town , flowers to he " tt rule to j in she gets on. Mio- one pe now other I Bnreet pet". um I small haul; "I Would no I t he must not first turn his attention to I the eommandments in the Pentateuc We must fir-t of all study the ideal tig- ures of the patriarehs, and the traits most prominent in the greatest religious characters of the earlier ages.†That is another way of saying that the ideals of the commandments were illustrated in neural life before they were engraven on tables of stone, and it is also true that the lives of the saints form the! but commentary on the Ten Words. " We would appreciate the beauty and sweetness of iilial obedience and rever- ence we must iinger over the lives of lien like Isaac and Joseph. The con- trast lay be seen in the undutilul Ab. saluin. whose tomb every youthful Jew to this day is rightfully taught to scorn. A promise of long life and prosperity is attached to the virtue which the An- cients called "piety." It is to be inter. preted in the national more than in the individual sense. The family is the basis of the State, and without due submission to parental authority there can be no stable foundation tor the MV tion.-Robert Martin. --_._.-.‘... “m ulatl “twlllllll II." that the four first commandments con- tain our duty to God, and the other It: out duty to man, but this is not let!- evident. The contention that the filth has a closet relation to the first four than to the last five has much to be laid in its favor. We should not granny err if we followed the ancients in assigning to filial love the name "piety," ind it In: thus relate the fifth commandment the two tables become symmetrical Ind may he elamqified as duties of piety and duties bearing on ptobity. "H any man wishes to get a true idea of the conduct expected in ancient Israel o' a just, upright. pious. sensible man, Th. "Ten Words" have bien "rim-I1 tlyeifitu. _ The Larger Catechism out“ With um wondrous um. "not; While yo uplift your hand- a _ Tho Cm. shall trim): than. Amt give you freely from mr - To the warriors in tho field: The more you give. to you tho no" Barrel and cruu shun yield. lo oniy can you cleanse your hunt born the [amine-- ot blood.' "For a mine: I no.“ in cm. ' An dying without God!†Go. co. tor the "etoar I'M! thee To all from thq M! I. Tte Idol-ten for when )1. did. To an heavenly mm but. in. gospel that thou m The power of God mm you. To mm}: o'er the sub " non By th' omnipotenco ot love. And remember. will. than littq'r-t. The voice of thy mun blood: "A million I month In (fun: Are driag without. God.'" aef. " ltho canny! go. oh! he)» 'hrrg not of the - 10' no ml not}. whit. In no, can. - with Ian Ind On the + of the have“ new, rot humid their It“ - Four hundred million. B% And A thousand "when we†all too tew To new]: than: on tho, (to! But hear, on! ttear " [or your-oin- The vole. of your “be“ blood: "A million . month in chin Are dyirur without. God'." 0 Church of no ltd-c UM'. Auto "-. ay in“! â€up t but than not host you l'lIl a" In" sourrdttxg o'er the - h it noun: (In: one out ot "Of, an. tBr n and to our dun-co) man: in China die having In": In.“ no w] of God‘s - Cum In: an. an to lh‘ out] mud, The vote. of thy What‘s Nod? "a mum . month in Chin. are dying without God!†" Minion {lath in Chin An Dying rould not like to take remarked to her thou: other' such nowi,r. -ijiGiaiir, peas. nrsturtitmts, can, she takes in: for ever. The Girst til iii tC. prov. infuity.--Vktor Hugo. (iiiitii,ifii,r “'92 A? iit'iiiit A Single Flower. Piety and Probity. 'preriate the beauty and iilial obedience and rever- t iinggr rover the lives of Without God." take so few," . thoughtfully one . _ ENGLISH fMlGRANTS. uay My all}! you: Any mG%G In“ pt» Mus b no good my- not Can?“ yet; I said I was not, so he "id I H but" com!- aml work for him till Ming bath: turned up. I started on Madam and on Tnursday he. an» to me and but me to go and N" " it a an ,rho “and un electrical ttttri-r, and any h- lent me. I got Ch. Job 7% any. Th- we mere in. ddmhmdhuny of thew†Cam hlp do" a new chum from 10ramrd. In thh In tho whole point: lo to work. Eh. any job that is otter- , an" P a; Fiiii iiitiit They oouid not do enough for me in Monti-.1: nothing was too much trou- u. for . (Mn to take to help along u new Engr.umtas. I decided to come Wart and strrfred at Vancouver. also Manila». 1 got tn introduction to a nun-mo! of I MIM' pull, and meeting him teett out to no by friends in Birming- ham. cod I rich to unwar- 'A Midland In? Main about Chanda. I have boon out some four years. I hnded in mutual an utter “ranger on s Thurs- hy; 1w introduced on the dock to can. (handing. who invited me to go mm! to their omco, and one of them took a - off to MW he tin; JiisTriii to put " in the way of work, which mow. M. imenQe I got at once. Mr. Perey R. mu, of Bullion, Car. the, British Cantata, lands the follow- he Interesting Mar to the editor of ttre Binnirgham My Post: “1 Due More In your his of April 6th last, A FEW 1mrrs IO THEM BY on - --e Vï¬- _"---- -__..l-. - I!“ tor “in! you», mu: be tr, damn. M u m u no "I: are w ‘02: watt-pe- (e,'?i1eF'i','s?i" - he unwed with im- miou- n and mm nd rub such spe- Mak equip-non: u b nee-r7 to conduct ttto humus In & can?!†Inner. Mum's Uni-eat Cunt Colds, etc. -. -____. - _.w..... u... noon at the “up. are ttt bo fucked 3nd am mtv. Outdoor nth “not: must be mad lam: Mu nttd “or insect; and fru- dust no out and. was " all has. The nan-Mom worn! poultry shop. tad mm; pm. MdeL an poultry and not be how In tho "m. dares or Inap- "tten with null. In." at Mo; not in“ M and in Wag 1tre poultry be per- Phe! ht 2t. Moro-ream, fugu- mod tor Tho regulations [waging pork wig“. Ii annin ' pic M, mum. nu a; fit :appio muting provide that all sub- hncata and for the“ pm?“ Jinn be -uetod.ototondmtt o tlteatMttqgt- heo ot W unimy conditions in ov- - Mat. Oil-sin lectures Inch " butchering. hog â€I. And normal. tat boiling Ind smok- " or my other procu- likely to mm or cub-into ire-h mut- IMii be ottrttitted norm Wu. no making at nun-u ht a killing mm b Dorian! laid-dict“. while the dentin. d amu- for no. in mm {taking in a. no room in which the sausage is would in the for-bide... 'thr rxihtim governing (in: houses at has. .un. or on" recep- co om: b. at impel-nous maria] And cloth. Tho noon. crih'.n- and wail. at tho at†man no in chum! frequently, “I in - with no: In ole-nod or dr- d. I til-ot-ttsed box-Jun be placed lt ulciLtho rduu. blood . arming. Tho we" or In wrapping war that Is “A or that has been used for other pur- - is uproar! prohibited. Shophepm rm not be permitted to km live poultry In ,0 mo room In which may» are “pond Ouaoed at the clone ot the day's busineu. Meat Cutters must be manly dusted and the tram contagious dimes; while no ro- Mo. act-.90. bones, nuclei tat or decaying than Ill.“ be kept in the ice-box with {rah but. The cum ot wrapping mum in old The 1"“an pvernln; no“ dogs pro- vIde an tttV nun m be kept scrupulously clan. and that during the summer mouths all doors end “more opening into each show mu be effectlvely protected mum in) en- hance of (He. by the use of comm. No new. dull be Damned to and or hang tn the open air exposed to insect: or street dust or other contaminant}; lnfluencee. Aut and be under glu- or tly now“, and In Inma- propeny Iced to prevent. spoiling. All Noah and rund- mt be kept clean by hogan: Erwin. um mum‘s, whuo wales. km"- 3nd Iomplemenu must De The min; and Ital-nae room- nnd lce box- .. muu be completely abut all an! rumpled um: a mm ot ventilation tor (run out- door gr. All the room In which meat I: argon-ed, cured. packed. stored. handled or exposed must be hand and vomllnted. All pm of the banding ant-t be painted or Vilma-nod nnd not in n thoroughly unl- tnry condltlon. The tweeter. are unma- od to My. taken trom the Mlldlnu any old table. or won that for any reason unnot be kept In n cleanly or salary condltlon. Alt was. truck; 3nd an", as well u all nuns. clams and other tools, must be donned duly. DIN-ed cube-u. cannot be transported through the one“: exposed to View and to contamlnulon by dun and lnuctl. but .Ll amuse: must be moletoly mules-ed tn 'rre6q"" ot mm mm. In tun-n. The clothing ot may. not be at n material - cleaned and must be washed dally, will. unplann- wlll be tqulrod to keep my Mod, glean while Mull“. meats. out be clan And washed â€nanny. while the walk ot the room: In which moat In cured mutt be tight and moon: And tree tron projection or crevices toe the accumu- htlon of mm. "wt-mun. III-II.- W""""" --- -- _.7, . w; u more: and about where nuns ere sold use: be lieu-ed end conducted under the supervision oi impede†from the Health Bantu. Any ot the large umber ot in- won, “on duty it will be to nuke ire- cmt trip- " alt - where men.- we noâ€. we ‘IVOII sachet-Sty to enter and in- - the building: tor the â€we†ot Innk- iu comm minimum: ot the membe- at my time that they on tit. Tho owner- at the when ot busineel cu: make no alien- uona or enme- without A special permit. which will he named atter the proper ot- ticinh - upon the prove-ed improve- menu. No one in Mind to live in any build- tt in which ulna]: Ire shunned. In Al building. will line to be specially tit- id and equipped tor ebullient“ purposes, “a when“ auxin; it MM. to keep the house elem mue1_ be New]. The noorg wuuvu - - _-- _-__ --- - (I. hum on: In ttte cum month. homunculus ,rul run but vary ought dun- nr ot patch-nu aimed or snow man tt the" In my actions "fort and. to una- ly 01:!qu than. The “at union of the an mien, ruck we. prepared by Director Nan with the u- nit-am ot Chief Abbott ot the Helm Bur- eau. in Men up entirely with than“: house mogul-noun. which with that m homes, " __= _LA__ _.h.-‘ Inna.- an (Phnuhlohh Record.) The no“ .trtnger.t regulate“ tor a. in.. Wlon ot naught" houses and - when meats. poultry and nsh no moi In: an an cold A. tood an included tn the m nuc- made public by tho Bureau ot Health â€andâ€. So my manual, in u. - at “an mutation. and pn- eatatMqtq m - around tho In. And pre- Mondm.1hh mag-noun: ta no mum. only In 'ieefr,, 2030-, - All. taaro6-PrttviiMtn for Clan- kâ€- in Building' and Employees and Plenty of PM): Air. “WIND“ port PHILADELPHIA SLAUGHTER HOUSES. MEAT INSPECTION. “Don’t you know, darling, that the.day I fell in love with you you had on In automobile coat Ind troggutrt"--Broob lyn Life. _ When the 'tyt,"t would [a to th nntall hehasto outogotoupiera. "If two can go in opposite dimtions at great speed on the same track what in the result t" "Collision." " "Not necessarily. You know they might be going away from each other." -Phhde1phu Ledger. . “Jack, dearest. would you love meh tare I ty lose Pr_1ook1t" There is no greater hymn, perhaps, in the language: there is none more universally familisr. It has been the comfort of thousands in their last hour; when years ago a ship sunk in the Bay of Biscay. a. man who was saved was asked what the passengers were doing, He mud that the lest he heard was "Rock of Ages," sung try all who could sing. In multitudes, of cases, in joy and in sorrow. in times of danger and amid seenes of ace. it he. been the language of the him. _ And yet, familiar as it is, and precious as it is, possibly there may be those to whom it is not (rite clear whet Top. lady meant by the mm in the first two lines of the hymn. tn Isa. 26. 4 is the expression. "exerhottintt strength.†but the marginal reading is "mek of ages.†It is probable that the real meaning has been brought out with beautiful .elenrnees since reading of the circum- _vsttarteeg under whkh the lines were ‘written. There is not far from the) place where Topltu1y used to serve u curate in charge. a. great rock rising up by the side of the road. In the midst, ms it were between two massive towers. is a deep cleft. One (by. in passing, he was driven into the shelter of this cleft to escape the fury of a. thunder. storm end it was while waiting thin, it is said. that he composed his great hymn.--Seleeted. . The postal savings bank is meeting with the po ttlar favor of the Filipino employees of the public printing plant at Manilla. They line up to deposit on pay days. Mind’s Liniment Cures DMemper. 735 worth and Great Britain $369250 worth. Gran} Britain'a makes pay 20 per cent. ad m) rem duty and all other coun- tries (except British madam) MW to pay 30 per cent. Though New Zealand bought $505,455 worth of pianos. $28,655 worth of and htsrmoniurm, and 398.115 ',','a'"3 other manta-ink. in 1906, in all $632,225 worth of mmical instrument. in that yen. the United States only contributed 327.240 worth. Germany furn'khed $245,- The nix great ports of India which received merchandise and itUtributed, it for consumption and "export in 1906 were: f1slirutta. 8141a70Mtr, Bombay, $126,iMtt.0str, Karachi, $31,449,tB6; Rane goon. 331.109.205; Madras, â€8.896.990, and Chittagong, $1.0iriUBo. Sugar mills -are I 'lied':",' m", iiiii ippines owing to the United States tar m. Customs receipts at Manila in April reached the sum of $661,507 gold, an 'in. ontage of $271.1†gold over April, 1906. q____,, -tl' . . A Mails just received from the Fer East state that the Osaka Shoe-en Kalsha. (steamship company) will forego its divi. dend for the half year just closed. so an 'p, egil'm'ibute to the Japanese Volunteer There's no limit. Everything may match. Then there are combinations. One girl has paraeol and sash match gloves. For occasions every accessory to shoes and stockings usually matches. While matching carries some to ab- surd limits, there are many terrible ex- amples of those who "don't bother" to keep them in countenance. Minard’s Liniment Cure: Diphtheria. lwhere. 'A.3lidUad Mit' amt make a fortune; did he. expect to pick dollars lup in the street? Any man can work and save money; this he an invest well. and can soon have a nice pile. What we want here are men with grit and de. termination to get on, and, moreover, who are not afraid to take off their coata and work. The Canadians hive not got one-half the contempt for the Englishman out here that I and 0 lot more English have. It seems the dump- ing ground for all the tired men they; have in England. I met three English- men (Cockncys) in Edmonton last Iepring. sent out by some charity; they ‘could not find work! Why, work Wu staring than in the face; but that m with pick and shovel and would not do for Mr. Englishman, even at thr a day, though they admitted fl a week was the most they got in London. They were, like 'Midland Man,' going back to run down Canada. instead of running down themselvoq as being useless. An English- man is sure of a good chance out here if he is a man: if not. neither his fellow. Engliuhrnen nor Canadians want him here. I know I could not hold the re- sponsible position nor get one-third the salary in England I do here, because over there I would be too young." “Rock of Ages, Cleft for " mm. tlttotrm All mm mm “‘- .or-t,or*-t-s will launwholom F LY "i'o,'?:"i'i'ii? PADS ""a'att." Collision Not Inevitable. Convincing Proof. Far Eastern Notes, Matching. 8Urboarder--The landlady any: you regard her as an old hen. 1unrooin-- Why, the idee! nothing could be farther from my thoughts. Starboarder-Come off; only this morning I heard you uk her to lay another egg on your plate. The eanut acreage in this coun in. creuof 150 per tent., and productigiy233 pelt cent, between 1890 and 1900. There we under cultivation now 517,000 acres, Producing 11,905,000 bunhels. The crop is concentrated in a few southern States, Virginia supplying one-third of it, North Carolina another third.-- ( The Punt Trade. Peanuts have become In important article of American foreign commerce in the last six years, especially on the import side, in spite of the net that we riduk about 12,000,000 bushels a your gaunt imports have grown in value from $6,000 in 1900 to '500,000 this year, while our exam thereof will approxiv mate 83001 . When this fiscal year closes we shall have to list peanuts for nearly $1,000,000 of our total foreign commerce for the year, according to e Bureau of Statiétim of the Department oCthmuneree and Labor. Fit for the tinert building. Cost Oshawa little enough. Reduce fire-risks. M e t a l Twothouaanddesltrna for Item. I halls, warerooms,churchu. reti- cei Ings deuce-gm. Write for handsome. ty illustrated book showing exdutive Peal" dem'-. The PEDLAR Peogle 'ft,t Oshawa Mantra-l Otutrq Toronto ndnn w "I am looking," said the King, "for those costly walls of Panama. They ought to be visible oven at this dis. tamre."--Youth's Companion. The King of S ain, the story goes, looked wenrily an; long one day out of the westerly windows of his paint-e. One of his Ministers inquired the reason for his apparent anxiety. Costly Walls of Panama. When the Spaniards built the city of Panama to be the great port of their Pacific commem- they ut around it walls which they “pm-to: to save them from raiders of all sorts. Although these walls were built by native: forced to work almost for nothing. they mat, says Mr. Forbes-Lindsay, not lees than $11,- deiItrnpoiuCdtrtl Quarterly dih‘ï¬uum'MH'rMLT-jzmu iii have. Min Blood Tonic parri&s e blood aedbyi1drttirrrterts. Thymuwandaful tttplete),! h,i"..Iglir.1t, f,?t',nt y"iLTstt?trfgat; l 2ht 2geit,g, “We: uh, Jedga found him not at the jurymen, K,) gust: '1 tale that tearin' up the wrong Kansas City Star. " 'Well, gentlemen, you find him guir tr.,. Y? you t' I asked. thTg,tilt.ci2ijii "tdt-rt-ea- "Before the jury retired I pieces of peper and wrote 'gui piece and 'not guilty' on the instructed the foreman of tt destroy the one he did not and to return the other to me jury reached a. verdict. The out only A few minutes whe in. The foreman handed me paper with the word 'guilty' , it. If you WM Ecaeatn a other SP. p'-ie-hsitir.BuaifsijJ--iiiirJBria if.f.ttfttlr,iia.teheikbo+".itub. TEMPLE BUILDING. mlom Capltal Id "serve. 53.900.†Be Your Own. Doctor ie “datum "odhijitik c- " '1 today. , The UIELQE was; therein, wmmawuayx“ rouwi1lthenhefaiFunedissthe fin way to aectmttakie money fat hue-near a "rainy ar." I "One day an old negro man was being tried in the justice eourt--tUt was be. llore the offiee of police judge was creat- (ed-and he demanded a trial by a jury of his peers. He could neither read nor write, and the lawyer insisted that the jury, to be his peers, " required by law, must be unable to read or write, too. To avoid dispute I agreed to it, but we had a time finding twelve men in Topeka who could neither read nor write. But we fe find them and the case went to trio. . wishto s.' AaGit,GL 'e1l'f'e'l',"drtld1'l"g'int1",','Cl'ui,"i, Ptt.oaot.woee'to-ramldmiit inthemail. the GG Trust Comp“: .Tm. Itrillettrtrmksethin Jpn lived iN in Tum-ad paid 'ttect at fuedownwwn. me: to make Deposits by Mall c: ttt is?“ feet,.",', a:- the t1'l'd Tat: 'd,1','e,1','.'Te',',2,'. 'a have been engaged in the notice of Itor 5 food may years," Ill S. S. Umy, polio. judge of Topeka, Km, “and about the most humorous thing I “it saw in a. court room was in To- pe a. Totes on.. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO W depom' t do". ~13me an ,'dfl'fl'd,"elll' by 9..er bymIPI-Bgol, [In at any Banking by Mail Tap: punt Riemann taoky-irtethaerm uh, Jedge, no uh, we done u not fei,',,tt, spoke up one of man. en he added with dig. tale that fool nigger he was I the Wrong piece of paper.' "- qt,, DA-.. has "All lluIIVIIID. to ' Mie Oirttsrert is wam: for up" and wrote 'guilty' on hm} 'not guilty' on the other, and u... a-_._n - A- - no Wm; Pager. jury retired I took two iorel'mn oijh"rjiir's""ii', e he..did not wish used minutes when' it' Ided me a piece of 'guilty' written on to, me when til; bulb“ XML gl') Wimt m 515?? m Hen to be Avoided. Avoid the man who when he drinks habitually drinks alone; who talk; to. ligion downtown in connection with his any business affairs; who deceive. his wife and bust. of it to others; “for. take. of hospitality and nun nd his ottteruiner's back; who chews ' co in a. ublic conveyance; who get. in. toxicataf in public pica; who bot-mu many from a friend an! than black. gtmrdsthalemUr; who rumindabtim no apparent intention of m. or who but. of the superiority of his fhrnélr.-. Henry Clews. Wests. What burdens ere borne by the reli- gious funcuonar.v'. "Wherewith shell I come before the Lord? Will the Lord be pleesed with thousands of rams. or ten thousand rivers of oil? Shell I give my firstborn for my trtuugression--the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul? Oh, the torture, the terror, and the darkness of the pagan heart! A wilderness where no water is, where there is unrestthere is waste. Think of the waste of energy, what groping in din end stony places; what pain in the construction of argu- ments; what anxiety in the composition of words; we build journeys in the re. gion of thoughts, toil in keeping hold of emotions, care in inventing projects, reducing the number of desires. Fore. casting the weather, the direction of the wind, th cold and power of events, and this notbonce, no sooner finished than they begin again. What consecration and re-eonsvcrntion! What waste in watching, driving awe] sleep; waste in I wsiting, and sometimes asking, What; wait I fort Lor. God is here with hands full of blessing. And yet the old delir- 'tum returns. Men went to get rid of evil in the heart; they go searching cav- erns with interns, and return with poor results. Ah! we make mistakes at the Jirst, we take a wrong departure, we Gust" return. God is the great searcher, Let Him do the work. Men went to destroy sin, bring your sins into His holy presence. He is a consuming fire.' Pride k hard and venomed bitter. God will soften and enlarge and sweeten. Men ere worried. God says, "Be still.†Every I good gift cometh down from the Father of Lights, with whom can be no vet-is.- tion, neither shadow that is out by tum. 'utg.--W. T. Miller. Judge a business not by its volumes, its turn-over-but by its earnings, it. profits Get the net, Size up an argument, not by the lenti- ' ment that is woven into it, but 'by the 1 strands of hard fact that form its warp ‘and woot-get the net. Pormulate an opinion, not a. you wish and Jeartt--trut tbs you son and know. Get the net. Estimate 0. man not by his clothes, his manners, his wordr-hut by the oharacter that lies within him-uid get the net. Eaten rather to the cold criticism of an enemy than to the friendly (has? of your intimate “swims; Chem WM not by the things you lave done, but rather by the mug. min" 1.“. .....)___ n . .. _ But. We “It“. In - m a â€new" Itch on hum: at attttrta3. an. In so may. by WoltoM'n mum m... tt "at mu. Sold by drum . H -i m“ """Nr" lel.‘ left undone. Get the net. Seek out the bare, the naked truth. --4lystem Magazine, Claim. -, ___,-. "A bottle of MINARD’S LIN] cured me of a very severe sprain leg, caused by a. fall while build bridge at Doherty Creek, Cumt Co." 8., Irtsireetor /iri?u"pt'". of atruction for Nova Scotia, " 'No, str,. rather a, matter of economy he explained. Thin small sums count to me, you see, and I have already saved enough to have my shoes ro-iusled.'"--. From' the Philadelphia Press. " Think we I _ttrked him. â€7r...†Jun“... "'No, air, and I an: very sorry,' he unswered. ‘I will try not in let it hap- pen aim It has been due to the fact that? have been walking to the office insteafl of riding.' "I have a bookkeeper in my office who is evidently destined to be one of our future captains of finance, all right," a. broker remarked the other day. "He is a good clerk, but he has been Ute several times, and I had to call him down, "You have been late three i ready this week,' I said. ‘Wha teuet-P,veriueipytg yourself t' anry Elliott, Libby, McNelll I: Libby L 0mm. - I A Melony but for Quick '- y.9.r-Libbyr'i, Corncd Beef Hash. while In the tin placedin boiling hot water for-lei minutes. or removed from the tin Ind browned in the oven for I few minutes. make: I most deliglrttulentree torluncheo. or dinner. Auk - tor Libby's nu hum†mung “My'l. Pug-arid from the most select Beet In Id by: Great White Kitchens. Abao. lute purity and cleanliness (unnamed. h In“; with the and undying - Pt' "my .0 much. libhy’s Corned Beef Ilttsh Training for a Financier. ON Ttit NET. I'l'Ol-l 't Fy., .of Sherbrooke, N, exercise does Id Supt. of Bridge iur. DVD. Scotia, says: MIXARD’S LINIMENT late three times ul- aid. 'What is the Th,ilelruik.iirir ----- you good t' ‘um-beriand _of my saved ' u After . dinner u Trinity . G.- bridge. while Fuller Bernard V. n, 8. J., and his teuttw luau. both men and woman, were examining the Mom “when: New" ot King Henry VHI.. son. on aaid to Na: "What would you do, hunt. a . Juan. It Henry the" were " this In“! to up out of the frame?" Not a Christian Science Goat. Harold’s mother was a devout follower of natural science. The two were etorasing t field while in the country and when the Ind aw a goat in the distance he shielded himself imrtietively behind his puut’c skirt. “W, I'm ashamed of you," she told him. "Don't know there is no Inch thing to wand that the gout mn't hurt rout" “Y-yes." he “aided timidly. 'T know it and you know it, but the goat don't know iL"-Chieago Tribune. mama Liniment Cum Cunt in Own. “I ohould rogue-t ull the hated to luv. the room," VI. tho Ill-unansw- "tstr.-- Pio!11_ttt Penny Running young children during the ennui; months is simply appalling. In the city of Montreal last week 175 children un- der the age of five years died. end neur- ly All the deaths were due to stomach tad bowel troubles. With ordimty nu moat of these little lives might have been saved. Watch the food given the little once .Do not feed menu; nee that the milk given is pure, and give an amnion] dose of Baby’s om, Tur. Uta, a, medicine which surpass all oth. ers in preventing and curing stomach and bowel troubles. Silent Radiance. There are individuals whose very pm- ence in a silent radiance from above and a benediction. There in song-thing about them that inspires fresh courage and new hope to many a disheartened will. The atmosphere they bring is that of faith and spiritual uplift. To be one of those faith inspire" is the greatest blessing of life. "It is not merely what He said to man about eternal veritiea that convinced them. It was something in Himself, an at- mosphere surrounding Him, and a ll. lent radiance shining from Him, that made it easier for them to believe in their own spiritual nature and in the Divine existence and presence." tlmtM-liilmg "mm on Duchess and Priscilla a... than a. has. Rfyir REF .tnd Hands an... an The banquet cost the happy father $1,800. During the evening quite a number of prominent members of the San Francisco Clearing Home coiled " the restaurant to offer their {elicitation to him. The hair-cutting ceremony, which was observed with ieturesque rites, symbolizes that Pong fllfeT'il heir is now 0. family tutor. 0mm warm-nan...“ odJi2T'id'iLi"d"d", 'ttttarose-att-tLuce-da-Liu;;',' I hmmrmmm The banquet took place at an Eighth street restaurant and there were 150 guests, any: the San Frarwiseo Chroni- cle. A notable feature was the feet that the wives and children of the guest; sat down at the same table with the heads of families. A most elaborate menu, comprising birds' nest soup, I†stuffed duck, Foon Yon Ha, sharks’ fine and other rare and costly Celestlll dishes were served. The number of deaths mpg-ring among BOD . [Inmate Ceremony Attending Flat thet. m of n Boy's lair. , One of the most ancient And curious custom. among the (mine... and our rarely commemorated in this country†was observed with great pomp And cir-\ cumsmnce in Chinatown, San Fronds- co, on a recent Sway light. when! Fong Hock, a leading merchant who tor years has had the supervision of the Chinese discounts in the AnghAhlifor; nian Bank of San Francisco, atertained his relatives to a remote degree with I magnificent banquet in honor of the first cutting of the hair of his only Be thtert,teg,t Bend-H'- Ilw;y- in the Matt . (or book "Truth: on the Home Ft free from dale†or Ind havi'KEa'dԠr "Mics. ï¬nch h'h,Teu'lltullllU: p. Itattureeeo'r. An lnfallible Cure For Bpninl. lingbone. 531m. Catt). Greene ' Lumen“: And t Bunches, moir- Spavln Cure bu no cqunl. Tailet Papers “mlm in Canada, Ask for EDDY'S MARINES 'eoteiis. P.Q.. Sept. te, '06. 'T have the we a; awning; a! mu:- Memory of Henry wn. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Newman. Stung u Gibraltn Link of at-iii"'-"- "- Princess zmem me Fee Childtcn's p, Little Darl‘igg~_t.a Little_Pet Fee Infants Luau wool an air... Eddy’s “I“! Al's ""'t"tn-.ve- c, UIIIEII. mum. HIM. “Tho uti-upitun‘ ordinance in m did a good thing for me," "id M Mounljoy, . Round Prairie town-Mp he. mer, who wu here last Suturdn’. "t 1tapprtedtotteinto-touUG day just after the luv run, into meet. and for fear I would apit on the “‘0de before I thought I failed to take t chow of tobacco all day and went without an I got home. I told my wit. about it, d she ouggelted to me that it I oould an chewing that long I could nit duh, and from tint day to this I ham and it." ~me the Fulton Gazette. lumen- all bad. no“ or all.“ km;- and blemishes trom he"... blood Ipvin, curbs. splints. ripet'oe, CW3, nun... Milo†and "out. modiooa‘hc; etc.» a)? $50 by me ft - bottle. ur- mud the mod: roam! Blemish Cur. mr hm Sold by {nah-u. he can “and a bottle by a in ' Mot. ('4'Cl't7L'lo)'j'i"fed"th,1,G'hV the bottle with another dot Mom n hita the ground. With a and] glib. trunnndi1-uadprmst1heesankno- theUad otttwhonthepooegluth- into the air. tad not injure tho wood covering. A (“who mum. d“: In is to Mart n ham} :'lli/xt,',g',1, Mtl d put a bullet through It. whoh on; time the turd was our. We this www.mnon W. I.“ view“! Hawk trl. It" County, w." lui., who was a. holy LiGl in batch He wu a shot from ttt back. Heoaatetothermusioeoem mound and em W. Am hi. I.“ of ',',2.l'd,,tau,etif the tflat dug}. explolu, we He (on, gag performiet Tall Shooting m mkCrriija." There " an old Confederate ooldie. tlow visiting some (dead. in Gm " well remember when I "I e by that our former: considered the eead of cotton poeitlve nuance and of no euth- ly mount,†laid T. B. Brieon, of font. “Year um year theae d-tnod eeede were thrown way by people who we" ignorant that at some future day they would add millions of doll": to the value of the cotton crop of the South. 1 - der to think of the not all: that wee lost to our eection ere this wee net-er- taine0. Nowadays the punter his seeds u 1 big "set, for they him at preeent. prices not less- thnn 81 e ton. All over the South cottoneeed oil mills have been put up, all of which on making good money for their owner. They not only get a valuable oil, worth M cents a gallon. but "ter its extraction produce e. meal from the kernel that it made into cakes and exported to All the markets of the world. This meal is one of the finest and most nutritious “title! that is used for feeding nnimale. Even the hulls of the need are valued for fat. toning cattle. and bring n good price."-. Washington Herald. ENGLISH SPAVIN UNIMENT Makes Baby Strong " Rm- the little - to parka Brtetu1ittGreo.peaa helm an: and slap. with“: metteri.etethyryaitiris.efr- iii,.".',".,":','))).'.,.,'),',.,;,,;,')',)]';',!,,';,,': ,' â€Michel-8'1“ a... uni-Ho “he and». yeloer8e!r..5ee-did WHEN the“ Tllrrr.k"fll2Uil' toss.l [SUB N0. " 1907. ‘Saves A Lot A In To“ that It bop-j qteettae - min-0w 1l"a'l'l5."ld'."l'del'1"g'. data-inlaid.†that the ttegg, ought to In" m use on your cloth“? Buy " " III_IIO.. Threw Away Killian. he Mngett tint-taut be cooked. .dut won‘t nick. .dutdvua bril- liantglo- Mth “most no Eon-econ..hn't . '.'"F:: ' WM t DEA] But I A [AM-om “u Mterw.N Abe -uint of aver-1 m t.hen More the m to Iona In or“... ohm. The elerka d the chop, and L I dorm .9va tin . m "prim tool thrown C',',",",? _',.' ert l m CHIEF STARE,1 0. TRIAL BY THE P a", in spite of Hu- ol u Monday and th, fa', -teatttg an underqu w h body and found, Mr but in . oomatooe oomiit: Mn revived nomad War-w. ind, Jury T.' tt" â€dummy gum an M death In tumour“ “I O 1001 1m. " Lone yaw-M M, fell and 4'll H, but lust nip â€than Are can "I Papa led Before t of Polite Cluck- Meeting Phat. one“: Wt. read duh! noon and dealing BIN hwy-huh you. Aa criminal lo a we criminal but)" him. " the " ft5eod a all. that mm n-. of print“. pr IIIIIle, provincial m effort u mor to “Main tf the judg‘ cud sink " what u known I. "dead 'tli, b put. q on: at th his». lad new: to h viet ion had. (we. ml RPM} than. pt 'r Ely, Minn., July 29. bma, local orgtoUer " â€at": of Mill-n, w .- My by but- DEATH ANN h c mums me p In mellow w my] "M Gui-hm an artid he, "are the no t with albumin ly pm. mun tint method, Muir an do: hare to “no {hr " funk throrn In Hm " criminals b: umud _ mum b) "In luv-II. bur “I.“ l ata-tttiq block to an mud in up? fund qtaod pi in: methods. tttt mun-i ot" err or. the Mic r'" brine. him†tyr. mttroaded iyeof folia- " “van r h an“ i' But Embalme Gave M - the nu: convenuc I. and Dun-tablet A (bl-In abound to on k. b attend the police vim“ Burk. ot Tom haunt-Ln; pper w "lei the pubhc t again k Nam. the Cro, It. loot A. I. mtliams. chm w "%emtoqthrt Wm. WM was dead. momhor of 1 u“- - the M! n 1tt,t",U,t The" own-tum. had-Ion. “than. " l mm they M inn If. t the “I. followed tor it: “It". keeper, It ohm n he got within mini: I1. I“ I In. eeeorted by n BlOCKS M Dido unfunmbce lthuwhinhu-hu went into a MM RAN Oll tbrq â€at." to: , follow“ fol but but! ml "