.'- 1 q V,-_ i= i I- i` .i ,_ ii.. iii' "I I ‘ll 1 i 1 su"sll'|s"“"“' SUITS VACATION o Lrrnra IDI- "l£'-'° -fr-.'--°:*°'-.sg sn mins. is-=°.-1-.'l-.'a=.;i.-..e :~:.':::~.=...=~...-: ewes'-.:s.:.; Blood-axlll these dis. paugngygnnd i 'wt luensspaln. “Mile 5..... c°°"° “.::°°°°“ .cr .. twodooforsss full ¢ll!\tt*l,Pr|op I had oaauabox. ml' rn bat they rollef ll . odBmitb'sBu- ... i“..‘£‘.‘.l.’”..."a iii lylldaaybookand JSI lsPsok sent ‘ - Th' " r.J'l‘I>..,m°‘&... §__g,§,~°_*_°_“m';1lfg_f:_°»,;§ W.l'.8HlTHCO. °§ "* '“"°-Y 5 mnnaaitnnsaai '°i'.'i&"'xs':5'."1°r‘lii;s. ‘!aeue0outl.sattoa.llekIIesAaehesadl.\iaea» nasaisana sung use 8snitn's Pineapple and BnttaraatI?lll.o. Onlrsseaaeaat Isaiah. ALI. me-W# § E§ ES I CWI! lffbe F£0PlI'I PRIDE. 3 ll Sermon _pi Great Contrasts lruplred by Yosemite----Tal ;‘“""§, - magian Word-Painting ,i f.Tf.i.. ~ , _ is His * _ , THE IDORLD OUER Thousands of .Mothers are using ilii. CilliEIiiiE’S nnlis' siiur mnnot but prepared n what ois lessant K. d Fl' admit the is one of rn claimed for it. and soothing for and a prompt ch stomach trouble. Physicians and Professional nurses recommend lf. In Zuxehasing, see that Dr. Oo- , du-re signature and portrait is on every wrapper. Beware of themalgs Svavrs pat in a similar foan made to ooslike Dr. Ooda~re’s. D122, 1_;&. Aer bdlla, er Q7 sail os ramp! q/prru. 8elepmprietov~s,fa~|Wraaafa&asn- CA.l.Cu.Limll»e¢L lent.rmI,Qnsda. ITANTOYPB PAIN IILIIF, araearsv nunv vos llvuvssanassa xx-rusmasuu i r isiéig giif li rtou /and your bread, biscuits, Cake ami pastry will be itll that any good cook could desire. lleaver Flour combines the ~ nuiriment of Manitoba Spring Wheat with the whiteness and flavor of Ontario Fall Wheat. That’s why it makes MORE I l~“-ind, and BETTER bread, 5 than any other Hour. £` llslldfasqsldgsh si- Tl” baussilea Q35/ Ai Your Grands. _.L _Z ' C772.) .ij-5 5-`-».~“ - P 1 3 i|G| C flint l’ ,till 5? “ . Ol SALERATYJB IS THE BEST. E.W.GlLLE`I'T ffrfin 1-ononro.o»n. . _, _ _ __ __ ,*_\.x -.-Ti.;-,Y-‘;` -ett.;-ssf»- ‘sf&' i _ _` '~- n ,W-\_& _.BU g _ _Im *__ M v J I ii” i ‘ xi i`_`=___ `§.i`--5 f" i 33'. lskil-"`,<}» t ' "‘\ ' 't,;\¢)j\q_i ~:=.*\ ` " .‘\‘*\-"' ig., .(al§;~_§, \;_j_,v;. \= ‘/4”; , \ ____ Seeds, S¢cdsJ NOW SOW THB BTJSTSEED. _ , g ut "While me eatin rt-maine-ih, seed :img in twain with the other halves thrown "ml l“"V¢"..l. shall not ci i ,” “Th” Swl il the woni of Goss? Luke 8-11. "I" me ‘morning sow thy seed, and in me *`-'venting sviiliolii not thy hand.” Eccl _ii-6. The stock of llibles that we hold si very large and all sold for less than coat. »n1.izi..i».,ii»f» _ !__; ”.'__~, _ "Mel them waving over cathedrals and over \ \ J- 3 village klrk spirea." Angels seemed *N \ ~,‘.‘.,’_',_/a o g _ .5 \f,,,|, .f _avalanches of snow or overtopping gla- \ 2/.; -.'_» ‘fart-_ , _ ,_ . . , t ,housss,_just to show what awful car- 'nage psndomonium had wrought. Here ,ef vook. than fortrassea ef rock, thase ` lalered according ts #tt oi Parliament of Canada, is the Baer neg. by redarfick Diver. si Tamara ax the epsrlleas o|Ag sullisre, Ortawa. Los Angeles, Cal., June 25.-In this sermon, suited to the vacation season, the preacher takes foi~"his Dulvll l |09 ty peak overlooking tha Yosemite val- ley and for his theme tha vivid lm- pressions awakened by his inspirinl surroundings. The text is Psalm xlv, 4. "Tha strength of the hills is hls." “Big” is s word which can be applied to the United States. but that word “big” especially can be applied to the natural wonders of Niagara Falls and Yellowstone Park and the Grand Can- yon of Arizona, and, above all. to tha wonderful Yosemite Valley, which, as a wonderland, has not its superior in all the world. The first time I viewed it was under specially favorable cir- cumstances. We left the railroad in the early hours of the morning for a long. seventy-two mile drive to this wonderful place. It was a day passing description and crowded with marvel- ous memoriss. lometimss, during that long, twelve hours' ride, we eould pick whole bouquets of wild flowers. The flora of A luxurlsnt springtime was bidding ns welcome. Then the storm clouds shut us in and the sun disap- peared. Then, as we climbed up and up the heights of the Sierra Nevsdas, we shivered and shook, first in s rain- storm, again ln a hallstorm and than a blinding snowstorm. Our limbs became so cramped that circulation was almost stopped. but on and on and on ws wen! until it drew near to the evening hour. Then the storm cleared away. God lifted the curtains of tho clouds, and suddenly the grandest view ever panorismaed before mortal eyes was mine. - "There," said the driver. "ls Yosem- ite Valley!" "Then," said I, "ons of the dreams of my life is fulfilled." But thoLlKh I have dreamed many wonder- ful dreams, though I have seen many of the wonlder scenes of the world, I never dreamed of or saw a sight like that. Chaos and cosmos, love and hate, beauty and :revolting hideousness, sum- mer and wdntei-',` hoary headed moun- tains with *their snoweaps of spotless white and 'with their limbs lined knee deep in wild flowers; appalling preci- pices and lovers’ retreats; roaring. rushing cataracts, with their "spirits of the evil winds." and rainbows play- irvg amid the mists, and as psssemen- tierles coloring the nether robes of the different sails; repulsion: and fascina- tlona-all seemed to be there. They were stretching out their hands toward me and calling. "Come, brother, come and sit at my feet. Come, and I will hurl three from yonder cliffs and upon thy poor mangled body I will let the vultures and the wild beasts banquet. Come, and I will show thee sights and wonders of _which thou hast never con- ceived. Come, come!" Amid 10,000 different voices in one great chorus. "Come, come, come!" they kept call- ing. And the echoing mountains off in a distance threw back the calls as from great sounding boards. "Camel Come! Comte!" Even to-day in imagin- ation I can hear those strange, weird, conflicting voices caalling me. Oh, the many emotions that surged through my heart sind soul when I drst- looked down from "Inspiration height" and dblvelided into the farther valley. As the rocks and the oliifs began to close in sroundme I felt as did Dante with Virgl-l by his side that I was descend- ing into heill. At the next moment I seemed to :feel that angelic companions were by tray side and that the pam- dislacal gates of pearl were opening for 'my celq-stial entrance. Michael An- gelo pnintqd both heaven and hell in OM Diciurq. Yosemite Valley is a "Last Judgment."f Everywhlther I turned Joy and sor- r0w. peace and anguish, happiness and terror, celristisl Gabriels and demoniac Frankonsitiins, white winged hopes and raven gamaerstsd .messengers of de- lvalr. sidn by side as cliff dwellers, were inhabiting the dark cavsms of those rocks, or were waving to me from those dhzy heights, or were hovering under those tents of snow canvas. or wore dwelling in enchanted palaces far above, yet wiithin the range of my won- dering sight. "Are those storm clouds?" I asked mylslf. Then I would answer: "No. Those are not storm clouds. Those are coronatien robes, for I asa to ba holding those garments in their hands while listening to the worship- ing suppliants within at prayer and saying. ','Thels robes, 0 weeping mor- tals, are for you as soon ss your earth- i ly'work is dons and you shall come to i dwell with Christ forever." Hers the rocks seemed t be rest ciers of ics ready to tumble down upon us and crush ul. There they seemed to be whole cities in_ ruins, as though ten thousand Vesuvluses had belched forth their fires and demolished them and then the demons had exhumod hese broken walls and destroyed there seemed to be hu e mountains c Tvay into space. There they looked llrs worlds just started and then left in a formative state, as though the Divine Creator had gona off and forgot- ten all about them. Hers they seemed to bs._,unsoalsble heights erected as walls"sbont'a huge-prison for lost souls. While there, again, e. sin Ben- tinel rock. they seemed to be signal- statlons lifting themselves high above the clouds to put us in touch with other worlds and with God. Thus these walls What the Preacher Saw From A Lofty Peak Overlook- I ing the Yosemite-Valley--Then. Turning From Nature to Nnturo's God He Exclnimed With ' the Psalmist: "The Strength of the Hills * _Alfovn ` I ages, seemed to be object lessons. It was as though tho Creator had opened ‘i his treasure vaults just s little that we i might pear in and sae his unlimited re- , sources. The psalmist‘s words, spoken thousands of years ago, were my words in the darkness of that night, and they are my words now, "The strength of the hills," or, as the revised version puts lt, "The heights of the hills are his also." As I climbed the awful, dizzy heights of one of the Sierra Nevadlts. by the edge of an appalling precipice to Glacier Point, this one thought was uppermost in my mind. Bonding and winding we go. Up and up the sure footed beasts carry us, higher and still higher. Then the rocks by the side of the preciploe grow deeper and deeper at each step. At lsit we are at the top, after a long tive mile pull. Then, by holding on to e. railing, you can look straight down l,250 feet. At. this al- titude of nearly two-thirds of a mile I looked straight down and saw the Mer- ced river. -It-was not a sliver thread bending and winding among the many trees in the valley; it was a green snake, beautufl, but groan. Its surface reflected every shade of green. from the darkest green, dark as Emerald' pool, to the lightest shades of aqua- marine and ehrysophrass. Yosemite falls' white garments alone have e. fall of 2,600 feat, or nearly onwhalf of a mile. Then, while I kept looking down into that awful preoipiee--looking down a palisada so deep that I leaned te be looking into space itself _ a still, small voisa seemed to 'talk to ma. When God called to lamuel, he called at night. To me, standing there upon- the pulpit of Glacier Point, it seemed that he oalied in the daytime. That- voioa was so real to my imagination that I tumed to my wife and asked, "Werryou speaking?" "No; did you hear any one talking?" she replied. "Yes," I answered; _"I thought I heard a voice and that- it-must be the voice of the Lord." Then the mysterious voice seemed to address me in these words: "When you go back to your pulpit you will walk tho stone streets of a great city. You will climb these, the beautiful moun- tains from the tops of which you can see the sun setting among the heaving waves of the westem Pacific. To- the east you can see the- sunbeams of the early moming burning themselves into the golden nuggets of many orange or- chards. You can hear the mowing ma- chines flghtlng their way through the harvest fields at your feet. But re- member underneath yeu is the same rock, the lame depths or rock, the same lmmensitles of rock you new see from'Glacier I-‘uint in Yosemite Valley. Remember, O man, that I put those rocks underneath thee that the waters of the Pacific might be an aquarium for thee and that the fields might feed thee and that thy hom_e might not be built upon the sinking sands. Even in the unseen rocks I am ever near thee. loving, caring, sustaining and protect- ing my children." Does this voice of the unseen rocks speak to yon of God's love, as on the panoramic rocks seen from Glacier Point it seemed to speak to me of the divine love when I stood in old Yosem- te. But the heights of the hills and the depths of the valleys of Yosemite teach more than the ever present, sustaining care of a Divine Father. Those rocks were to me libraries of the past cen- turies and of the mlllenniums. You and I have road about the famous libraries of ancient Alexandria and Nineveh and Babylon. Wa have heard that these ancient books were so many that in Alexandria alone it took six months to destroy part of them when those parchments and manuscripts were used for common fuel to light the fires of the 4,000 bathrooms of that great city. But I want to tell you that when ,s msn rides through Yosemite Valley and climbs its dizzy heights he is looking upon the historic pages of books older than the oldest tablets of stone exhumed from amid the ruins of an ancient Troy. I-Ia is looking st a greater library than all the books of Nineveh, Babylon or Alexandria com- bined. There he is looking upon the millions of open leaves of rock written upon by the pon of but one Author, and that pon is "the linger of God." If the recorded pages of the books of rock found among the shelves of rock and upon the floors of rock and lying open upon the tables of rock of Yosemite Valley do not teach us that God as sri author has been living cen- turies upon centuries and rnillennlums upon millennlnms ago and that he will also live and work through the can- turies snd the millenniums to eome, than I say the Yosemite rocks “teach us nothing.” Then we have eyes to seo and we will not see, and we have ears to hear and we will not hear. Every step you take, svory move you make. presses home the one truth-that the Creator of this region is atomsl in his own life and eternal in his' purposes. Mariposa Grove, whlch‘grows just outside of this valley and praetioslly under the shadow of ll Capitan. se living ors'tors teach the stems! pur- poses and workings of the Divine Faf ther, My, what sig preachers thayara! About |00 of them grow near together. as though' they were ashamed of their his sirtns and ashamed because, libs Baul. they raise their _huge bodies set only head and shoulders above slrotb- er trees, but because they make other trees look like pygmles .beside tiers. "driisly Bears," "columbia," "Haver- ford," "1faripo¢a,"~ "Wawosm" "Cali- fornia," "Telescope," "fl'he Thrbs, Gracie.” ara some of the modern nalnse glyen to these mmous trees. lo|lll..¢f thjern are over |00 fest talL Oni is IN feet in circumference md I8 feet from aids to side. Ona is out in the triiddls 5525 by four horses. can it. This tree was was to it was kind was out a few as o lo lille. that it has alone. twenty When I stood asonlter it lifted lt- so wide that I felt its size psssed human concep- tion. Why, a 1Il.rt_~an one of “Old Grlssly’s" cheeks would be llrle enough to be usedllsr an Indian wig- wam. A goiter on _his nook _wouldbe big enougnte noses gxwhola family M white folks and givnkg _them a osllsl. parlor a d bedroom rl. bttio and a cor Y ‘ gigantic one I self so nets are almost enough te fence in the lslds of an ordinary farm. . . The trees of Mariposa Grove, grand old veterans are they! ~ No other liv- ing warriors have fought so many bat-‘ tles. What milk!! 3 tornadoes have they defied! Ylfh_st‘strellIth of a thou-' sand Haroulesos is isrthase iron back- bonesl What unoonqnerable heights they endured! But, after all, the most impressive fact to me about those trees is not their great girth nor their great height, but that they are living troes._ They are not rnummidsd trans found among the cemeteries of dead trees. “What is the greatest fact that im- presses you about the big trees?" I asked a gentleman. "That they are alive." he answered. Yes, that is the overwhelming fact about Mariposa Grove. Those big trees are alive, just as we are alive. You can ga and stand by some of thanx and ses their sides wrinkled and seared like the indenta- tlonl upon the cheek of the sphlnx of the Egyptian desert, but you can feel that they are alive. You can seo where some of their sides have been burned by forest fires. In the Haverford tres the wood burned out of one side has left s. cavity large enough to shelter twenty horses or head of cattle from tho winter storms, yet the Haverford treo is alive. The great Telescope tree had forest fires est into its sides and tunnel their way into its centre and than from tha contre burn up until you can stand at the bottom of the tree and look up through it and see the blue sky of the heavens above you. Yet the Telescope tria is alive and still grow- ing. Tho six hundred trees of Marl- pesa Grove are emphatically alive. _ As I stood with uncovered head amid the huge trees of Mariposa Grove “Old ,Grisaly," the greatest of the group, if he could have spokes might have sold: "White man of the east, you think you belong to a rses of kings, but I would tell you that you are not a king. You are so short lived that you are no more to me than the insect which is born i_n a dsy. grows old in a day and dies of old age at tha setting of the sun is tl , cupola besides. ~- 'And its llyflads .ol have thoyl What forest dren havo- .- This sickness 'sad recover! 0! BU* gsdgthingg, the manifestations of the i whom the Lord now uses in His serv- I the their gloridod bodies. Wit-ll°\l¢ Bill. MV' sr or un PGN _ ._ , cannot but CWM "mlm "‘°“‘5°l"°' waiting (Rom. . How would you take it? Try U1 ,ut _ _ .. consider H ou are _ready ilrgrélllgl i mess glory downs; to die is galil. *-0 5° Wm' Christ is very ‘far better." 01' W°\\ld YW (I0 the ss uncertain snd_health`is,no assurance _ that we sinnistey, it is, eertaniiy W1" -to our affairs as far as possible in B l\1Ul‘ factory condition, and. H1011. 0111’ “ml being washed in I-Iis_precious b_l°°d~ _ we _ want mo, Lord, .I lm .l'°ld3'_" lu Tim' IV, hadnot the iight that we- have. There was no crucified and risen and ascend- od he lest of ll Lesson, Isa. x`xxvtll» 14- le-oey bosses, 4-O-Gaiden Text, f., glyl, fl¢Ill‘°‘ by lov. D. I-“ltolral tvvrnlalt. wi. lv-asusieu ran unenueal me in mme ts purer. vhldl ll ll" ealasneversemll Ghron.xxxll.24. h liessded more fully in our lesson and with even more fullness- of detail IIII Kingayx, But, asialsstweek’l the faetsf its bailll 01"* Um" recorded Indicates its sD0¢|l| imll°"' tauos. and laki our sll°¢ll\ l"*°tl°° BCI p, m. for Rives _ =', T.‘§~.‘CRAIG, . 5-6 ii if. Charlzftgswn. _ _ g' _g __: end new before us there are many eceitful heart that is in ever! °“°- Whst s contrast between the i>¢0Dl° unreliable in soul and bed! lillfllli today, sick tomorrow and dead next day, and the same pe0l1l° ill sick, requiring no time for eating sleeping, serving I'ilm,ii8! Bild Nlllf; ce well wma; .me whole seenqlly, PF* ectlyl Those who undel§U\i1d‘iY for the redemption of the bod! viii, 3) yourself in I-Ieseltiillfi P1500 “'14 Y ago. Would you-ssl.;-"Ti“1l\l‘ °"|» u Baskin dm--turn your face to wall and WND 'NFQPY7 l““°m“°l’ our stay in these mortal bodies is have our house in order always. all can say always. ~"A-ll! “U10 YU" 6). » _i _ - We must remember that Hbseklah omni ni me esy. yét Mem when was called in full health made D0 fd - S CRS _ ‘ Iili Rishi? Remember you never show your socks so often or so much of them as in -ummer-especially will this be the ca e this summer with low shoes so generally worn Our showing of fancy hose is the best we ever made. The demand for tan shoes makes it neceraary that you wear tan hosiery We can suit you to a nicely- ' ` You will not know what is new U” 'IYOU ‘UWC b¢¢l1 here- i f P.aiu, serviceable hosiery is l1ere_also. `25c, 35, '40, 50. and 60 ce_i.ts » - D.,A. I BRUCE, nsN'srUsN1sHER.', Q _ Morris Block. ' of Be Y C I0 tq,y<%u, _ _You think you know the past. liu_t,_ _have seen more sights and heard more 'sounds than your people will ever or hear though they may live to basis old as Msthusslsh. My ears have heard the birth eries and the death rat- tles not of generations, but of species. When I had been living thousands of years I heard the click _of the traw- s\s_and tho grosnlngs of the machinery that lifted the rocks and laid the .cap- stone of _ the pyramids. When I` stretched my head above the clouds so that I could sea upon the other sid`e the world I could see the thronas of tha Caesars lift themselves and then, tottsr and fall. I heard the angels chant the song of the Nativity above thlehsm of Judasaf I have seen Athens rise in her power and the Gre- cian sculptors and the posts wax and wana and die. The old mound builder! used to pitch their wigwams at my feet. Backward, still backward, into time I go. Long 'before the ooyote’s call was heard among tha hills or tha griszly bear growled at the Indians who afterward took their name I lived. Though I have lived 'at least 5.009 ears in the past, l sm llvlng\stlll. Furthermore, I. will continue to live anturles upon centuries after your voice has died away. I shsll speak your great-great-great-great-greab great-grandchildren as I am now speak- ing to you." Oh, yes, the old trees of Mariposa Grove teach nothing-if they o not preach to us the eternal pur- posas of God or of God working through the centuries. A thousand years in God's sight are but as yesterday, or as a watch in tha night. If the trees of Mariposa Grove teach us this, how much more must the libraries of rock among the shelves of Yosemite hills tsuh the same les- sons. Wa look with wondsrment upon some of the vases or the household pottery used by the American or Me!- ican aborginss. You say, "They were heated in fires thousands ef years ago." Yes, but have you ever stopped to thin_k when the fires were lighted by the complaint (Dent. xxxli,- 49. 50! Xxxlvv is-1;. mms, the prophet. brwrhf ¢h°_ message to Hesekiah, amd he sir 011" gave himself to prayer,i sndbefore th° prophet had left the middle court tlld word 0! the Lord camo`te him, sayilllf. _“Turn again and toll Iitliekisll. the 0119' tain of My people, thus, saith the Lord, the God of David, tbyl, father, I have heard thy prayer, I lhsvo seen thy tears; behold, I will hssI»th'ee." - . How rapid the communication be tween earth and heaven, ,how belilflflil ‘to have an anointed our like Isaial.\’s. in time with aaa; to user me wireless messages even as we walk the street! Hewgrest the pi-ivnese and power °f prayer which can take.-hold Of G05 even for the prolongation of our I0- journ in a mortal body if it seems best to Him! That a man who rwss about to ,die should be up andabout in i2l1l'0¢ to prayer, some means were -used.” the prophet's orders (II.-Kings, PI. 7)- - - It does seem strange thatvaome bo-- li ould deem this use of mqllill in s stent with the prsyer_‘__0i‘ faith- The king did not seem. satisfied _with me simple were 'er qod by tiie`prorfh°i and so asked for s sig# that the Lord would do as He had quid. The Lord graciously gave him ai sign and oven gave him his choice of uwo signs. Bow gracious and wonderf l' -is our God lil to indulge His unwert y ‘and unbeliev- ing childrenl But l ; us not fort" “Blessed srsthey the _have not seen, yet have believed," _“Blessed is she _that believed, for therq shall be s per- formance of those igs which were told her from the"Lord " Let our mot- to be, “I believe God' that it shall be even as it was told ‘fix ”‘ (John xx, 29; L dayswas nothing short of is miracle. and yet, while it was a direct answer to if. ' The toltlmony to Hezekiah in _ _ . , ~ u cam. xxxi, eo, 21, could mm- .ly be Improved upon. W* in "'° "°°` ' _ * "’ ` ' ~ - ` , ` ‘i'e‘ ' V L l \_ ___ wi ,_ __ ‘ ;_'.___:‘.: _ ._ - _ __ '_ H -._ ~`_,.`., ` _ ._..'§.==’f"‘ . _ l” ., . ' ii' : - . ii? 7,] _ ~T_\'._} N I , J , - rf w 3. _‘;_"_rf» '»;_¥__;\e `~~=;__;§Sj ‘=__`_\;l.' =?\%‘- l_ _ " "~.,,;“ =. i .. .<2 -*'-\‘3f”;rs`~9.¥?%_ »-s;, -' 'f"i;;-‘ -sv . Ar. YQ., _ 1 33.. _H I' l I ; -bl-f Larkspur. Marigoid, Balsam, Chry a 'ti GAY5’ 1>LlNis » N Annuals-Asters, Phlox. Petu I bil- ..._B ‘_‘\ ,~ I*-'Sl " _(sv - an-_ ,` . The beautiful in nature is well worth cu1tivst‘lng.=-_Nothing adds to the appearance of a place so much as a well l`rept"ilower garden. and we naturally draw conclusions and the owner of a beautiful garden is raised higher in the estimation of the passer by. _ The following is a partial lot of our stock-_- ‘ = . ' Perennials,--Pansy and Daisy in bloom, Dlanthus.Cariiation. Sweet William, 'Forget-me-nom. 40c per dozen, 4c '_efa`ch, se'edling Pansies r5c-‘per do;en. ,. ~ ‘ . n erbina. Stocks, Mignonette. , "Scabocia, Salphlgiossis. Csndytuftv Snap dragou»Alyssum at _per doien. _Sr-.oo per. ‘root Single and dfouble Dshlias from seeds per 'dozenl Double Dahlia 8c to roc each ' Vegetllble plants-Early transplanted C'sbb2i"ge:4ub per xw, r flower and'Cele'ry 5oc r roof Extra early tomato -4c each, -4 pe dozen. Late, T c per dozen. Late Cabbage plants for fall and winter use xzc ' r too. Perennials sent by mail rc-'_'e;s,rt_\'s' each must be added for postage, and cabbage. cauliflower and celery 5c per :oo extra for postage. ' Tomato pldnts/'ac extra per _dozenfor postage. But annuals postage free We have a daily m_srket_,_gn_cl_ _when at all con- venient give us a call any day of the week and' yve_ wi'l_l.treat you well. Cash must accompany order. Order by rail ‘or 'boat ii' possible- We pack 'in _damp moss and plants are good for s weeki-from time of shipping. hands of God which hardened yonder rocks? - Have you ever stopped to reckon how old must have been those pencils of ice which wrote yonder chapters upon thoss hillsides and whleh, mlllanniums ago. as glaciers, polished those walls until to-d_sy'tbey reflect the light of the' rising sun ss bumished ssiirrors? Can you ees with naked sys the star as a signal fire burning on the picket line at the far thernsoet outer edge af all stars? Can you, at a mare haphasss-d guess, stats the direct distance between this earth and that star? Can you go up and up in imagination until you see the senith for a footetool and the nadir for s bright jewel in your ooronet. Then, if you can, you may estimate how long it took God, in his atemal purpose, to pro~ ducs yonder rocks and how long that etamal purpose shall liva after the 'Yo- semite Valley`itself shall ba cremated in »the fumaoa of the asrtl's lest con- iisgratlen. _If these rocks teach us that thousands and millions of years in God's sight are as but s second or time. not ballavevva can trust to his few years we are upon this If God can use the ages for may wa not be satisfied to with us as ha will for the of three and msn’s upon g stor-' Yo- echo when foot ll. UWB. the los. no longer., everywhere in as I-lil. God mighty obelisks and pyramids of rock. Bible Society. ' ‘ time great sneats or reel: even union oeassan¢s_»ves¢aeau¢enea»ns¢|!**l!°°°eh 'lil “U °°v°Hll- MW -» L_* .4-1-s-_*_-._-._ -_._ _ at _tba base and hu a square out out efheolargathatsereatthroeeeated 0 -l covery from his illneasf as 'givcltin our ‘ lesson chapter containsi many most sug- gestive saylngs, such its verses 15-17: Himself hsth done it. lil'-shsllfgb softly all my yekrs." ' The _b .tter _inisoul de- livered and. all 'sins |iut sway. But' how_ easy it is to say a nd how dilcnlt to dol If all our good iresointions were kept and all our vows 3 ter-formed, what a be. But, alas, how sad- to read, “Hess- kiah rendered. not sgd In according the benefit done unto im, for his heart was lifted up; thereto a was wrath up- wnen me rn.; er rzlssyien' sent let- ters _and a present- tol his recovery from his iillness Hoseklah proudly and boastfull;| ' - self instead of Jehove lt, and displayed . _ , lil. ld an V! kingdom. As a consisqnaace of this the 'prophet was sent ,le Hesekish again humiln thus averted wrath _ini us lsy to hdrt tbsifwllll to us there is nothing I __ tainly does become in | memberiag Rom. xiv, I:i‘ that ohne; in stent Heeekialrs life llssrll and were it _not for; | or a_lnost"wiqed life ‘ll tion whether theseslill l a, real blessing or~.-nshs , night not have ban-wld or Kiasma' _as ef'.r\siss'Iseas|ss ' for that |aaa"'lf I|s_d__s*:t been bora.* It is wise tb desire spit sill I0! It ......~..~....._. uke I, 45; Acts xxv_ll,_§Z5). , ....1 ... :rue writing er _Hess -isa,srterhis;ro- He hath both spoke i unto me, and good testimony for iod there would n him" (II Chron xx Ji, 25) Hezekiah after magnified him ll his treasures in his, house and in his the king with under which himself and days. Let isltorsoelle. , li! em .es message from the 5'*-. I ~ """ ?;5;§'f%t§5 nd nothing we sliowlt oticad sad heard in l umble ourselves to wi it isevident from II it Nlilbtl '° #it it ra 'vseeseifa il0l`:li.Q‘iC‘Il`sd-' ‘naw cw- ii 4---..b¢_L¢ signs furnished ,when mama. Plasgirawa-whes.zsqal_ .with- out a E. F...-Put; ov. J. J. GAY SON, Charlottetown P. E. Island.- I I =1:::::=s===ii=:i=a».....;s;;ea~.ss= BEST SET OF TEETI1’ $8.00 Owing to the closing out of s lsrgewwholessle dental-‘suppl com- pany wewer able to purchase a large s k of high -grsde'.'-toetb and material at e very low figure. Th s means we ¢su,"wh”Ile ‘our stock lasts, give you the regular "f _ $10-00 SET Ol' TEETH FOR _$8.00. The teeth and material are the best that moneycan buy, and are guaranteed by the manufacturers and ourselves. ' ' j If yon wish to take advantage of this oder you bsd_better dolso at once as the price only lasts while the stock does. _ _ If you have teeth tobe extracted don’t .,worry__gl;o t, th m. ,We ssh by_th_e_\;:: of VITALIZED AIR take th_cn_1,put_\,Q§,£'R0i\t£“" YW tes . -EXTIIACTING FREE when plates are ordoréd. ,_`.lxli_- -wgrk guar- -nteed fully' , ' .-1 ,'.-'-3.21 ii..'. r- . ,` . BERLIN DENTAL I FM-Ri.é0RS,` Over Prowae Bros. Dr. C. H. BEER. Proprietor, 7 I Phone |53. sits ss I w . _ , - . We have the largest and best stock of Ssroophaguses. ltosamenta.'l‘ab- _ lets and Headstones ever exhibited ' fin the Maritime Provinees,ln Marble ‘of all-shades. also red,f°r:ky and black 5 granite. Ii is worth. ing _st if you don’t want to purchase. Ii you want to pitrehsse this is the best snd_cheapsst_p on P. li. I. Correspondence hsgliclted- 'Da- s __ r