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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-05-29, Page 3it Has 1 'Iiff'fl t Clear so appreciated by J a,pan tea dri11kers. Ceylon GREEN 'Ilea, will clispla•ee Japan 'Teta just as "SIA,L1D.A" Bilack displacing aI1 other block teas. In leapt packets only, 2vc and Me per In.. By all grocers. • • A0A, l 'L Op"— r ins E ar !�l IPS INDURA 1 ED FIBRE WARE TUBS, OA LS, ETC For sale by all first class dealers els-tell„•rteA See- CI) 'et er E e <L ) ete's li INTENATIONAL LESSON NO. IX. MAY 31, 1003. The Life•G icing Spirit.—ltom, 8: 1.11. Coltuncatary-1. Freedom from sin through Christ (vs. 1-r-,». 1. Therefore —Tilts rulers to the whole previous aig*t went, and eslaecittlly to the pre- vious chapter. "1Litherto the episa;e Itis discn.sbod and explained, from many sides, the great question of justification and its immediate re - Its. Tno last topic thus considered is tale attitude of the law totvaz.eds the soul—a,n attitude suchthat the law cannot subdue sin, but can only oppose and condemn -it. No condemna- tion—As Cona1emnu.thon is the resultof disobe{Ilemee, this clearly implies that the belie wer canlive witheu.t tram gres:ng the law of God—he may, ns :live free frosin. In Christ Jesus— "The whole prow ions argument of tit epistle makes it plain that those wit are in Christ are those who have bo "Justified through faith." Tule is n mere legal arrangement ; it is union in life. Tee he law—A. law is a rule of ac tion established by. reeognizi'd etu tilority to enforce Justice and diree duty. — Standard I k tionary. 7111 wore. law here iueans tied; rule, emu snand, orinfiu:nee ;°: i.i.lt the "S :Fri of like" ptwtiuec..--Beines. Spirit o life—Tile close argduurnt fuliotrin implies that the Spire' GC life here 1 ,1111' ,same its the . i>tr't ul' ts,,d cuts of Christ in vorses 0, 11, `s ; and 1111 coo be no other than lire tidy } pirit in eltrai for v. 11. lie Is the Spirit of life, for ail life sprit. e from lane—,Beet Tee Hely Sahel. is the Spirit of life ba aau,se, he leads the soul to es- cape the eenteuce of death, and then "aulinittee it with the energies of the new lee." In Christ J•et;us—Christ •Jrvus lethe meritorious cause of ,lus- tiCiCrttien, the hotel of 1110 just.ifictl and the giver of the Spirit. Law of 1ody is doomed to death because of sin, that is, because of Adam's transgression and the penal re- sults or sin. , 11. But if, etc.—Barnes thtuks the verse floes not refer to the, resur rection of 'the dead. PIe says: "Ph sense le that under the gospel, by the influence of the. Spirit, the en tiro man will be made alive in th service od Gocl.” • 12-14. Debtors—We are debtors to the Spirit, but to the flesh we owe nothing. We disown its un- righteous claims. Shall die—If you live to indulge yoair carnal propene. cities you will sink to eternal death. —Barnes. Mortify—" Put to death,' destroy. Sin is mortified when its power b destroyed a.nd it ceases to l,e active." Deeds or the body—The corrupt inclinations and passions, called deeds of the body because they are supposed to have their or- igin in the fleshly appetites. Shall live—Shall be saved. "Either your eines must die or you inust. No man e can he saved in his sins," Led—Sub- 'a mit to his influence and control. Sons n of God—Children of God. This ex - o preezian is often applied to C'hris- a, bans in the Bible. 'Teadbings—It is our privilege to - live and walk in Christ. It takes - the same power that raised Christ I. from the dead to regenerate a soul e spiritually dead. Christians should - follow le,ading a of the Spirit. t PRACTICAL SURVEY. The apostle in this lessen brings e' out with great elearness the evi- ct deuces of a true Christian experi- s from the t m vin thce oughtlie ; and shows the moral necessity of each position taken. The preceding chapter, we believe, describes the condition of a man whose conscience is thoroughly aroused and awakened, who, in con- sequence of this, desires to be saved but hopes and tries to work out lee own salvation. He .desires to be good, and do right, and attempts to be what he Seca lie ought to be. The third verso clearly teaches the e inability of anyone to do right with- out aid from on .high. Jesus Christ 1 eondenined sin in the flesh beeanse, by. divine help, Ile lived a sinless life. itis agonizing cry on the cross, "Why bast thou toes:Oren me?" indicates His dependence on help from above. Sin in the flesh was condemned be- cause He t.ttus lived. Thus by divine • help, the righteousness of the law. may be fulfilled ill us. The fift•I1 verse shows the differ- enee between a sinner and a Chris- tian, between an unconverted and • a eonverted menoThere is much con- troversy in these days even among some preachers as to what consti- tutes to Christian. Our lesson says ; One follows "Ilia things of the flesh," the other "the things of the Spir- it." The interest of the one is set on the things of this world, that of the other on the soul's eternal ,in- terests. The sixth verse gives a conclusion, followed bythe reason for ouch a conclusion. Carnally minded means death ; spiritually minded means life and peace. Christianity is a new Iife in the world and in the convert. Through its benign inflnenee the soul has peace. Spiritual death, with all that term Involves, reigns where sin is dominant. Another corollary, Is thrown le, "So then they that are in the flesh.ean- not please God." 'X est this state- ment should discourage some one, or be misunderstood, another thought is addded, "But ye are not in• 'the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you." Assurance of the resurrection is given, since the same Spirit that raised up Jesus Is in Christians and will quicken their mortal bodies. . An : infallible mark of soenship is given, "As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sone of God.":. What a privilege we enjoy', to be guided by the divine Spirit as we Journey through this world of, sin! Emory mory Coleman. za naecleum shed book and a tin basin or coup. Ci iiit'�"''n'i''➢n_,. ,raI'6rd"ken t I .�o"set". ,.^,... " Naw say to the company that you aro gding to 'borrow a pettily front I • same one and. alter wrapping it in youl handkerchief you will cause it to bast. down thorough the top of the table and drop into the basin. (laving obtained the !penny you ask the lender of It to. put some little mark on it i.ly' mea,ns of which he may know it' again; then you pretend to wrap it in the liandkerebief that you take from your pocket, but you really conceal it 111 your right hand, wrapping tee handkerchief around the penny that yoil have already sewed in it. d little practice will enable you to do this in a Way to eaeape••detection. You naust do the wrapping so that the spect:at•ore, to whore you offer the handkerchief for examination, may feel the !penny and be stare that it is there. Then lay the llan•dker- chlef on the table and on it place the book, which should be large enough to conceal it entirely. All this time yon have heen hold- ing in your right hand., tucked away l:etween two of the fingers, the pen- ny that you borrowed. Now take oe the hasin, r cup, in that handand peas et under the table, holding it right under the book. Take care to hold it so that your fingers may 'readily release the penny; make two or three passes over the Book with your left hand say "Presto le and int the same time let the penny drop from your right hand into the basin. 0f course the company will hear lit fail; then you tering• the basin into "Mew and place it on the table and as the company is looking at It, you take the handkerchief from under the book, and holding it by _ the earner 'in which the penny is e sewed, you shake it and show that the penny is no looser in it. .. e sue and diettb—"Sin and deathar partners. of one tt:rone and issue one `hew. To obey sin is to walk in a pati marked ou i by death." -1 Det. 3. Tee law—The law of Moses— the moral co,lc, as is .always meant when trot otherwise elefinee. Week — The law, wets powerless to deliver from tin or to produce holiness. It canld not fulfil its own fulfilment Tee flesh—The term flesh has sev- eral different signifneations. In this instance it has reference to man's corrupt and fallen nature. ,Senting —This refers to Christ's birth and piaiuly implies that Christ was '' Oc1's "own ,son" before He was scut — that Is, before He became incur- nate. 4, 5. The righteousness—The de- xnatids of God's righteous law, which +could be met by us when we followed, the evil inclinations of acorrupt, sinful nature, are now, fulfilled in us 'who live and act. as the Spirit guides. Flesh . . . Spirit—"Men must be ender the predominating influence of one or the outer of these two prin- •elplos, and .according as the one or the other has the mastery will be the complexion of the life and the ,character of the 'actions." An evil tree brings forth evil 1 uit a.nd a .good tree brings forth good fruit. II. The carnal and spiritual con- trasted (vs. 6-8). 6. Carnally mind- ed—To allow the carnal or corrupt nature to gain the ascendency and to be controlled and led by it, is death—Not "will lead to death," but is death." 7, 8. Is enmity -This is stated as as reason why, "the mind ;of the flesh is death" (v. 6) ;, it is opposed to •sod tend bates God. Neither . . can •be—Tilis is absolutely certain, ee- •oause it • is a carnal mind and rel- 'ts1es earthly and sinful things and 'lives in open rebellion against God. n5o then-1?,eeause the carnal rninci Is enmity against God, therefore "they that are in the flesh" -those who axe led and controlled by the dictates of their corrupt, fleshly nee ture, "cannot please God," and con- sogtrertly, axe doomed to eternal ;death. XIX. The cond:i,tio'n of those who fel- leaw. the Spirit.—vs. 9-14. 9. But— Patel now gives the cloture of the 'regenerate state. The Spirit—The Bpir!it of God rend the Spirit of Christ are merely different expressions for the Hoey Spirit, the third persto.n of the Trinity. Davell in you — The )Moly Spirit Is often spoken of as derailing- in the hearted of Christians. 10. Body is dead—There are a va- .riiety of 'opinions as to the meaning' eei voreee 10 and 11. Soiree• understand itieleeto mean that the body is dead lin respect to sin, that is, that the iauemelters of the body no more l e r- hlmthe works of stn. Others think t the apostle means that the Every glome needs n, remedy that is adapted for use in casae of sudden accident or Illness. Such a one is Painkiller. 25caa.bottle. Avoid substitutes. There is but one "Pain- killer"—Perry Davis'. The Mage Penny. • There is not a boy who would not line to know how to make a penny go 'through the top of a wooden table and drop into a bas- e); olei a, cup heid underneath. A trick, of con.rs•e, like the thousand and rine tricks you see the magicians perform. eeetore you go to a party sow n; penny neatly in one corner of a hahnd- kereluiele ,then fold thea handkerchief and put it in your pocket. When you are ready to perform the trick have a email tattle placed in, the middle .of the room and on it age Woven oven , Vit' Ere Fence with its continuous 0011 (not crlmped)is the boat stock' -holding fence made. Page No. 7 wiro stands n3,000pounds'strain--064mm% No. 7 wird only 1,700 pounds. Oetnrnon wird will not coil—it straightens out n ain—it hasn't a spring temper—Page wire, hes. The Vitae 'Wire ranee 041„ Limited, WSlkerhili0, Oat. r &ontreml,. J'.,(t., and St..John, a ,n. 31 Mrs. Laura L. Barnes, Wash= ington, D. C., Ladies Auxiliary to Burnside Post, No. 4, G. A. R., recommends Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " In diseases that come to women only, as a rule, the doctor is called in, some- times several doctors, but still matters go from bad to worse ; but .I have never known of a case of female weak- ness which was not helped when Lydia E. Philrham's Vegetable Compound was used faithfully, For young! 'women who are subject to headaches, backeeho, irregular or pain- ful periods, and nervous attacks due to the severe dada on the svt tete by some organic trouble, and for wotien of advanced years in the most trying time et life, it serves to correct every trouble and restore a healthy action of all organs of the body. "Lydia E.Pinkltam'sVegetable Compound is a household reliance in my home, and I would not be with- out it. In all my experience with this medicine, which covers years, I have found nothing to equal it and al- ways recommend it."—Mrs. Letrne. L. Ba nems, 607 Second St., N. E., Wash- ington, D. C. --•$5000 forfeit If odgrnal of above leiter proving genuineness cannot be produced. Such testimony should be ac- cepted by all women as convinc- ing evidence that Lydia E. Pinklsaln's Vegetable Compound stands without a peer as a rem- edy for all the distressing stills of women. No Repeats, Thank. You. Exchange. I•Io—I had a hard 'time getting a good wile. Ste—Goodness! Have you been married several times ? He—Oh, no ; bu'(C I courted my pre - Cent one six years. Flies Carry Contagion en's Fly Pads hill the flice end disees© germs too. d• Witt t Webster says a wart is a small, unusually hard tumor on the skin Termed of its vascular papillae and thickening of the epidermis Which; cov'ere them. But there are other kinds of warts. For instance, there is the person who enures up behind you on the Street and 'suddenly, without warning, slaps you on the back. He is a wart. This species usua.liy has a hand like a ham and when it comes in con- tact with! you it :sets .your teeth to rattling, your backbone to wob- bling and your very, soul shaking 1n its scat. •'111114 Flap -her -on -the -back is not it full-sized, good wart, but is one of those small, pestiferous varieties. Ito le the quintessence of worseneso, the very' fag end of all that la pusil- lanilnoua, TJien there is the other kind that rocks ai boat, il'e le also a wart. Ile IR alr,c the limit. He not only dxowns.; hints le but u, u ally d.'age' dotvf Witb' him Innocent victims, w110 should Have known better than to have t .rtl;st ecl m the.- > V• company. 1 Title mse,l ns in his c p' nY. ie wart somehow manages to arrive ;to the state of adaulthood r t llrayon'O Remedies for Cili2�irene "Train mothers to intelligently look rafter the health of their families and the well-being of a nation i"s assured." Munyon. It has. assuredly *been �a labor of love for me to study the diseases of children with a view to their relief and cure. Many grown people will stubbornly cling to the debilitating drugs and nostrums that are a relic of barbarism, but I hold that it is almost a crime to give them to children at the risk of physical and mental degeneration. My remedies for children's diseases are effective and prompt, but they are entirely harmless. Every thoughtful mother should have 2; Ivlunyon Family Medicine Chest, and ebould never fail to keep it supplied with Munyon's Cold Cure, Cough Cure, Sore Throat Cure, Fever Cure, D. D. & C. Tab- lets, Croup Cure, Cholera Morbus Cure, Constipation Curs., Worm Cure, Face and Skin Ointment, Mun.yon's Balm and Mun- yon's Plasters. This chest will prove an unfailing silent friend in the hour of need. A few doses of the proper remedy given at the right time will prevent long and dangerous spells of sickness, and save many doctors' fees. g 10 MUNYON'S REMEDIES. Munyon's Medicine Cases, $3.80, ei and 110. Munyon's Cold Cure prevents pneu- monia, and breaks up a cold in a few hours. Price 25c.. Personal letters addressed to Prof. Munyon, Philadelphia, U. S. A., contain- ing details of sickness, will be answer- ed promptly and free advice es to treat- ment will be given. 1213 without being struck dead. now be escapes so long is a mystery, bat his fate finally overtakes him. There comes a time when he goes out in a i:o�lt. 7huid compenlons shriek as the little craft is tilted a, little, This gives the fiend his cue. Slowly he begins to rock the skiff. The next; day there is a picas In the paper telling all about the drowning, and a few days after that there aro several funerals, Eliminate the warts. Eradicate the excrescences. Put them out of bud - nem. Cut out the proturberances. Onion seed is about the worst thing in the world. If it were not for onion seed we would have no onions. If It were not for onions we would have no onion breaths. Therefore, a bas the onion seed. A 'busy telephone Is far worse than a plague. It not only conduces to .profanity, but it drives mon to 'drink. There should be a late against ouch things. Life is not all roses and sunshine. A man often bas to take quinine with his 'Whiskey. If a bell rang at every chestnut all other sounds would be entirely drowned out. A good 'child makes the parents suspicious. Doubt is one of the greatest 'curses with which humanity has to contend. . A soft answer often maketh a man sick. I y, Life's burdens would bo greatly lightened if collars with saw edges were done away with. A snob Is a person with some clotting and no brains. If it rained only on the unjust there would be plenty, to get wet. It is a pity that pleasures do not leave pleasant soars to match the ones pains leave. WATCHED HONOR GUESTS. Silo Made a Mistake and They AO lieollowecl it. ,Teat the advice, "Watch hoc', eth- ane do and then do likewise," is not always good to social as/Arcuate was illustrated in a town very near this city the other evening at a dinner given by a young matron in honor of a guest of acknowledged social ,standing. The society of the town was there to see this far-famed grand dame, the social lioness and the admiration Of all the "climbers." . When coffee was served, and with it the Indispensable chocolate mints, the guest was seen to take one of the sweets and toy with' it gracefully over her coffee cup. Instantly every woman at the table did likewise. Evi- dently some new: wrinkle of fashion wane about to be exhibited. Every eye was on the guest and on that mint drop. Determination to follow the leader and give no sign that they were not in tie habit of doipg this new trick every day was written on every face. The sudden calm caused the guest to look up, and as she did so she inadvertently dropped her inlet into tl�e' tiny cup. To lier sur- prise a series of clinks ran around the table as each of the rural ones followed her mistake. Appreciating the situation, the guest hastily gulped dowel, her coffee to hide her mirth. Later in the evening :she heard one woman remark to another: "I don't care if it is swe11. I don't like mint In my coffee." "Oh, dear," replied the other loftily, "it Is really deliolous. I never think of taking my demi-tlusse without it." • From the Smat•t Set. Willie Littlebow—What's a hero, anyhow!? Bob •Tlihekneck—A hero is a feller that dart to tie a tin can to a bail -clog's loll. --- The Cannibal Ding (his teeth chat- tering)—What was its you served with the last meal ? I've had a pro- longed chill ever since. Royal Cook—That, sire, was a female missionary from Boston. "It's hard to lose one's relatives," crud the poor man, insinuatingly. hard ? . growled the millionaire. 'Why, it's almost impossible!" Knlcker—low Gild he beoomn an expert aeoountant 7 Rocker—Proving 'to Ids wire that it was twelve whoa he Dame home a "Lord Ninny titlnke ills brain is affected,'' "Pooh! I 'wonder that he wore les over .a little thing like tlfftt.'0 The 1�Y ,�°� etc. �w�'www..,rw�wvorv�,..r.•rnvar.rr,.war Leading Wheat M(Irkets, Following are the closing quota- tions at important wheat eentreci to -clay ; Cash. July, Nem* York 1 -- 791-2 Chicago ..,..,. ... _ 7111-2 Toledo 76 1-8 74,54 DuJutli, NO, "1 N 79 3-ee 7014-8 Ureter levo Stock Markets. London. May ,i3.— Prices are un- changed; Canadian cattle are 103 to 113e per Ib, drsssect weight; Am- erican cattle, 11% to 1.S'4e per lb. refrigerator beef is 9 tie 9a,+ie per lb.; sheep, ftli ij to 133e per lb. 1 ivurpoo1 Markris. Liverpool, iday '2 .—C1osingwhea.t, spat, No. 2 rad western, winter, firm, 6s 4 1-20. No. 1 narthhern. spring, 6s 7 1-26; No. 1 Cal., steady, es 8 1-20; futures, quiet, July, 6s 4d; Sept., 6s 1 7-80. • Toronto Farmers' Market. May 23: Tihe only grain receipts on the street were 150 bushels of oats, lvllich• sold at 8,5E to &Gc, Other grains purely nominal. Hay quiet and steady, with sales of 20 load at $12 to $15 a ton. tor timothy, and at $6 to $9 for mixed. Stiltw. quiet at $e to $8.25 a ton, for two loads., Dressed hogs are dull, light sell- ing at $8 to $S ed, and heavy. at; $7 to $7: 1e I:ollowiilg are the range of quo- tations a Wheat, white, bushel, 74 to 74};e; red. 74 to 713e ; goose, 67e, Oats, S"5elj to •3o; c, Parley, 44 to 46c• foes, 7.a to 7F e Ilay, timothy, per tori, $12 to $1u; mixed, $6 to •'r 9. Straw, per ton, $-; to $8.25. Ap- ples, per bbl., $1..-a) to $2' 30. Dress- ed 11og:o, Jigbl, ; , to .$8.221. 1',ggs, new laic!, 13 to 1-1c, Butter., dairy, id to `:are; creamery, 20 to 24.e. Chickens, per jb., 1;,: to :.'Oe. Tur- keys, per lb., '-Oo. Potatoes, per bag, $1.10 to cheer Toronto Live Stock. Export cattle, choice cwt.. $ 4 70 to 5 OS do naediuua.,......... .. 4 25 to 4 51 do cons, per cw, ; 30 to 4 00 Inferior cows........,... 2 75 to 3 '25 Butcher..' pinked 4 CO to 5 00 do good to choice 4 20 to 4 50 do fair to medium 3 (:0 to 3 50 do rough to common3 00 to 3 10 Bulls, export heavy 3 50 to 4 0u do light 3 25 to 3 0u Feeders. short-k,;cp...... 4 5e1 to 5 00 do medium 4 lei to 4 a) do light 3 75 to 4 25 Stockers, choice i 50 to 4 09 do common 2 75 to 3 00 afilch cow", each 30 0o to 17 00 Light 'Sheep 4 5U to 1 7d Heavy Sheep 3 50 to 4 00 lucks. per cwt 3 GO to 3 •?3 Grain -fed ewer, wether,5 0'.1 to 5 5,) Grain -fed bock„ 21 00 to 5 50 Spring lamb. 2 59 to 4 50 Barnyard Iambs 3 00 to f1(0 Calves, each b 00 to 10 00 do per Ib 0 01 to V 05, Hovis. select. ner cwt 21 00 to 0 5rt . dolor, per out :i 73 to 009 do light, per ctrl 5 75 to 0 OU Drop in Cotton. New York, May 2.3.—It wee a badly "mixed'' eiowd that surround - eel the pit ill th ecotto nner- l:et this morning. "Liverpool cab:es were sensationally weak, tlir. wotttlt- er leap a ahs reflected favorable c onditiont;, and early f'stinettee in - ideated that port r.i'cipts for the day would once mor, greatly ex- ceed last year, .et the opening, there ' seemed a dieposithon to let the big ill0n o: (1111, i' .•i It. s't the paetd. 8•1i11 there was enough lewdness to make the Opening active. At the start the hen•t s hal all the best of it, first p•h'rs b•ilrr 11 rat "A points lew'r with J:r'y 1 c li'ne on th , c ti: at. 10.09, Au ust 107:1, and 11ep•tenlber at 970 Remarkable Cure of; Dodd's Kidner Valentine Fisher's Tell Pains Speedily Var. the Great Kidney d1eF`. Collingwvod, May 25 Every eity, town' and Vhl. oda is reporting roma. by Doeid's Kidney Pills wood Is not behind the are scores of people het used the great Kidney 1 who are not blow to splendid results. Palen, we1leknown in the to rounding country, is on "I was troubled with ease for thirteen years," says in telling of his eu' veloped into Sciatica wh in my side so that I cgonl without a cane. I had podermie injections of ea ease the pain. "I tried different mediae. medicines with no good r was persuaded to try D ney Pills. Three boxes perfect cure. I can r Dodd's Kidney Pills to all suffering from Rheumatic other form of Kidney Di A Dainty Belt..:. Belts are a much admire every fashionable bodice, an much attention if one in pretense of dressing with to charming example for Fonar select black satin or taffet the belt on a proper found at medium width, fastening without clasps in front. In Ole of the back allow; two lo der tabs to fall down upon th to the length of five inches to be bias silk aiso and, cut n er at the top than at the b Embroider in the middle of ea. three white silk star flower finish the bottom of each tab a bow of double -face Week sati bon very little over an inch hanging in layers with two or ends. The effect is most plea and adds much to the becoming of every waist line, besides it g a security against any amide/ opening of the skirt placket. Bacteria CouIdn't Hit Him. We know of the case of a cert man, very tired of lire, thorough willing to die but unwilling to ta his life by any active step, who more than one weary year edurt bacterial disease in New York b, frequenting, and especially by ea, ing in, the places where danger= bacteria are known most to aboun lite mad? hl:mself a mark for microbe But none ever seemed to find hini- If Ile had a cord, or wall exhausted or "run down"' lroni any specite cause, lin .stralght�c ay. *.v••arhe l`lai, nese 1111.1 other cheerer aesta..uuunts trusting to get hold of the ,typhole 1•acillus and become its prey. In vain ; his health improved, rather than otherwise, on the Chinese or; the Syrian regimen. Ile is alive and in good health to -clay. Ordlnaxy exe porience, indeed, tenets to confirxq the impression that eitber there is al divinity that shapes our ends, ren gn.rdless of ,germs, or else that pre- i,orva.tion from bacterial disease dee pends rather an eeonstitudional or inherent immunity than on delivorea once from Contact with the liblquie cus little monster.—Harper's Weekly. The Sleepy Song. As soon as the fire burns red and low And the house upstairs is still, Sao sings mo a queer little sleeps Of sheep tilat go over the hill. The good little sheep run swift and soft, Their colors are grays and white ; They fallow their leader nose to tail, For they, must be home by, night. • And ono slips over and one comes next, And one rune alter behind, The gray one's nose at the white one's tall, , . The top of the hill they find. And when they get to the top at the bill They quietly slip away,• But one runs over and on0 comes nest— Their colors are white and gray, And over they go, and over they, go, And over tile' tap of the hill, The goad little- sheep run thjiak and feat, And the house upestatrs is still. And one slips over and one comes next, The goad little, gray lttttle steep: I watch hone the fire burns red and low, And elm says that I fall asleep. —Josephine Dodge Daskttul, in Me- , Clure's ;Magazine. , A Word for lighting Mae. Tho tragedy too deep for tears that took place last• week at the Hotel Regina, in Paris. 14 too im- portant to ail interested In mili- tary matters to be passed over in silence. The French behaved with the courtesy of a, chivalrous nation towards a dead soldier. But the British public snrpasscal Itself in huddle- headed venom and stupid priggislme es. With only the vague wording of a Press telegram to go ou, everyone in club, 'bus, tram and street jnnlped to the very worst conehufs.af1 possible, and accepted as well-roun{led, charger; thee were not even formulated. The only redeem- ing feature in the ease was the way the Scotsmen rushed together to demand that the body of their hero alibied rest in Scottish soil. In the 1100t'ts of those loyal country oleo) of hi(l, his best. memorial will be created. The rest is silence. La meet enese tout. SOotla.nd has given Ito 'Many Wrens and no doubt will gives us, many t1>ore, but it will he a long time before oven tape gives •1321 sticll a brave coitli',1' men as le'iehting Mac." --The London Sow' Lee gtls , Paths. Tee bath that leads to a Loaf et Bread • Winds through the Swamps e'i' Tom And ;the path that 1eea.,de to a Suit of, Clothes t Goes through the flowerless scale And the path that leads to a'Loaf off Bread • And a Suit of Clothes is hard. 1i tread,. And the path that leads to a Hous) of Your: Own Climbs over the bouldered hills; . e And time paths that lead to a Baffle, Accoumet Area swept by the blast that kills. But the neap who starts in t1re paths to -da In the Lay Allis may go a,strrbyp, Le the Lazy, Hills are treett,to.shatele By the dreamy brooks of Sleep, And 'Ibe rollicking River of P1ea;staare' laughs And gatn,bols down the steep,, But we•eln the blasts of whiter route The brook and the river are frozen. dumb. I. .1 • Teen woe to those in the Lazy Hills. When the blasts of winter moalh, Who stt'a.yed from the path to s. Bulk Account 'And the patli to a Haase of Thein Own. These paths are hard in the summer heat, But in winter they lead to a, snag retreat. • . 1 —S. "GP. POO. i Nuggets Prom, Georgia. Atlanta Constitution. The mockingbird sings because th'e song's in him, but lotsof folks sing P1.100a1140 they think they have yoioes. The humble things of 1110 are the sweetest, after all. The trees of the wocel1a.nds cattle the dews of heaven and drip 'em down ta„yott. • There woutd be more honor in political office if so -many didn't neglect the greater duties of lime in seeking it. 'ste10 hope of it is that the gong lane will have a turn at last ; but frequently the lane turns unexpect- edly and overturns tate wagon, Try a :Picnic or Two. Ottawa levee Prose. This time last year and a little Ittt er the eoolnpina,int in malty; ,section waleto tote uch rakeraNow 'tile colo. ry ♦ C , plaint :s bone {1 i atI q I 1 play r,rs lt1 th churches are talked of. How wo3i1 would it do to commence the 'and-' Sebool p1cnice and c outshone stead,? •