'il _ -f *\`l'1,l_1Q 'rneou,me mommy ln 1 .....»-tools"-=f1¢.». Allen s Lung Balsam It never hill to cum a SIMPLE Reveal the Power ol (rods Love and Care of rea lon - e in as an’s Teacher. cow, mmvv co1.p,....1 ` C i.. - Th At M BLES. Lllie Bottles ll.00. leillln Sill B011. ‘_ Snail or Trial Size Me lndorllod by all who have tried it. _ COUGH N0 MORE Sl_|il!3_'liE THE REMEDY OFTHE DAY .0 d A It tl .|`p:'u:.°`le &:r,"(z6?l4%nheHy,°, Hoarkound and Tar. Sclentilleally oamllned In tha form of agreeable and pala- table Syrup. One of the mid reliable tions yet introduced to the dpugc for the immediate Relief an (hire of Coughs, Colds, Brvacllihlr, Hoon# ner ll//ra Crou Ad)- masvand thspThxmt’ and Lungs. - Token with Cotl Liver Oil first stage of Oonsumptio be found invaluable. l _ For role everywhere. his 25 &, or by mall an recap! Q/pda. Sole pmprietori, IKWYRQATIW- c/lr. Co. Limited, Montreal., Banda. MCGALE’S sur-rsanur PILLS vol vcua uvrn ann aolvlu. °* '.-'i9V~5"- '» ' DR. WF./\VER'S TREATMENT WEAVER’S SYRUP For Humors Salt Rheum Scrofuloos Swellings, etc. WEAVER’S CERATE Cleanses the Skin _ Beautifies the Complexion. Combined. these prspnmtlnns not power- fully upon lilo systeln, cuulpletely eradicat- ing the Poison in `.he blood. Davin &. Lawrence Co., Ltd., Montreal- 'A "HE lllli lilillll llillilllli PIIYIIJEBS slid X .APEC/gg X fri-‘i“'§ if %"""mU~“°\ BUT TH ERE I8 ONLY ONE Miillil iliK|llli PllWllEil ? W C . Vh I "“sol.l>'.'i§‘7.‘i’»'l's'l‘%.‘§’.f.?“°"'°" ~».// e;.w.G|u.E'r°r sfzrerg V TORONTO. ON‘l’. all BRONCHIAL TROU- .P #lr is ` BEAVER FLOUR l \ Never Fails. Beaver Flour never disap- P°intstheoook. Tlzebaking niways turns out rl/gm_b¢. cause Beaver Flour/is alygyg l the same, whetlng y¢m buy a small sack or a.barreL Beaver Flour il a ‘blend of Manitoba Spring Wheat and Ontario Fall Wheat. it contains all the nutriment of the wheat ` kerneL Make bread and ,. biscuits-cake and pastry-r' that are aa healthful and strengthening, aa thsy gg Wl1l¢¢. delicious and inviting. At Your Gmcer’s. Kneaded in every home KEN! Fl.0UR. Ask your grocers for it. In bags or barrels ., Wholesale by Carvell Bros. I Entered according to Act of Parliament of Canuil. in the Bear |905. by Frederick Diver. of Toronto. ax the epartmcat ofAgrlcullure, Ottawa. Los Angeles, Cal., J une 4.-In his ser- mon the preacher, drawing an oblcct lesson from the insect world, shows the importance in human affairs of honest, intelligent, unremittlng indus- try und the folly of those who belittle or undcrvaiue lt. The text is Proverbs vi, 6. "Go to the ant, thou sluggard. consider her ways and be wise." it was n hot, sultry aftemoon in summer on the famous Chautauqua ground of New York when Bishop John I-I. Vincent knocked at Wilbur Chapman'a door. "Come in," called tho evangelist. In walked the founder of the Chautauqua movement in this country. He said. "Chapman, I wont you to go and hearm lecture this after- noon." ‘What on?" “It ls Elven by a college professor. The lecture is en- titled 'My friends the Gila. Monster, the Horned Owl, the Opossum and the Rst!" "No, bishop," said Dr. Chall- mnn: “I cannot go. I am utterly worn out by speaking. Besides that, I have a big meeting for to-night for which I must rest and prepare. You must let me off this once." "No, Chapman, I will not lot you off. You must come. There is il. great treat in store for you.' So, under the pleading demands of Bishop Vincent, he went. "At first," said Dr. Chapman after- ward, “I sat awavy back in the audi- ence, that I might be able to slip away unseen. But as the speaker began to talk about his novel friends I became more and more absorbed. Uncon- sciousiy I went halfway down the aisle and 'took a seat nearer to the speaker. Then, as he talked on and on, I crept further and further until I was in the front seat. There I sat for nearly two long hours laughing and crying and learning the great lessons of life from the lives of the most hum- ble of God's creatures. I never before rcalired that there was so much love and affection and unselfishness and brain power in creeping things and loathsome reptiles and poisonous liz- ards and repulsive rats." The little things of earth reveal the _power of God's love and care, as well as the greater things. King Solomon would introduce to us one of his little friends. He would have us use an ant hill for a. pulpit. He would have for the preacher of the moming one of the ordinary, commonplace, large mandi- bled, many jointed, long antennaed, 'six ‘legged insects that we can see in almost every country bypath. He would toll us that the snt’s intelligent forethought, hcr persevering energy, her many social nflinities, her mortal hatreds, her sensitivsness to smell and color. hcr architectural genius with which she constructs the palace in which are to be deposited the precious eggs, her slaves and nurses who serve her in pence, her military captains who marshal her great armies in war, her care for the cocoons in which the grubs are developed into the perfect insects, as the caterpillar unfolds the trlmslig- ured life of ll. butterfly, offer unlimited fields for gospel illustration. "Go to the ant, thou sluggard, consider her WHYSBH be wise.". Bu , usy, busy. "Busy as nn ant" is an old proverb. Whether she is car- ing for her eggs or finding the grubs; whether she belongs to ls foraging par- ty or is going forth upon a. war of con- quest to capture the eggs of another hive, which eggs she intends to devel- op into future slaves; whether she is migrating from one part of the country to another or is building the walls and the hallways, squaring the chambers, lgylng the foundations er arching the ome of s. nlew house, tho ant is al- lways busy. She works during the dsy, sho works while she sleeps. Her ambi- tion is not 'to find out how little she can do, but 'how much she can do. She works, and. works, and works. She keeps on wiorking. To do something is the very breath of her existence. This proverb is axiomatic. You go out for a. summer stroll and one of your little children calls: "Oh, mother, come and look. See these little black things. What are they?" "Ants, my dear," you soy. Then you stoop over that hive and watch them. They are moving, al- Wflys moving. Some are busy house Oicsning. lf you could enter the cham- ber of an ant mo-und, you would find that each room and connecting hali- woy are absolutely clean. Every par- _ticlc of dust which once choked those 8111101405 has been carried out, piece by Dicce. and deposited afar off, where if Wm "Ol Obsiruct the openings of the ent hill. Some of these ants are house Cleaning. Sumo are going after food. Some are ca.ril‘\g for the grubs. But they are nil woiaking--the nntp nm 5|- WRYR working. f Their working hours are simply unlimited. slr John Lub- bock, the fnmlfl us naturalist, reported that he once wiltched a single ant who worked withol intermission or relaxa- tion from 6 o'< lock in the moming until _nearly 10 o'cl1ick at night. For sixteen l\0\1l‘! that Milt continued diligently at her task. Yo u cannot dream of e. lot Of ‘Hits Betti Jig together, as do some me" i0-lilly. vhose chief sim seems to be to find c t how little work they can do- in li o and what is the mul- “Wm Of Pill they can forcs out of *heir STUDIO) , rs for-s. minimum of la- b0l'~ `0h. I1 .. That is not the ant's WHY, No soc er does the sunlight crawl over the oar ern’ hills than thsont hive becomes bu ly. The different ants soy: "CONN, sis ers, we must get to work. Hurry up u w. we have so much ‘work 10 <10 and such s. little time in which man foot jmay have often crushed an ant in thg pathway. but I doubt if it ‘WU kills an ant taking an aftemoon HBP- Wil Eu on ant ia slain in the conn- iry road he is always hurrying some- W|\°\‘9 0 r trying to get back to her hive dips. sm hu moomplnlloa cu "Consider Her Ways and be Wise." Said King Solo- mon. Noted Throughout the Ages For His Wisdom -Object Lesson From the Insect World' Show- ing the importance of Little Things. . l purpose of her joumey. he is work- ing. Bhe is continually working. Bile is always working. Idieness has no place in God's econ- omy. Lifsis work: life means a con- tinual struggle for physical as well as moral and apiritusi existence. God would not-send the snpwa of winter. the drafts of summers, the winds, the frosts s.nd the hunger unless he meant man to work; God would not have made helplessness during infancy and childhood unless he meant a. parent to work; God would not send sickness and helpless old age unless he desired all people to work during the strength and vigor of manhood and womnnhood. "If any would not work, neither should he sat." is the Pauline inveotive against sloth. "Go to the ant, thou sluggard. Consider her ways and be wise." All happiness and health, all mental, so- cial, spiritual and _flnancialf progress depend upon perseverlng toil. The soon- er our growing boys and girls realize that they must work for a. livelihood the better it will be for them and the better it will be for us who are caring for them during the years of their de- velopment. - Unremitting toil, an essential for hu- man life, is the first lesson the ant hill teacher us to-day. But the ability to make the right use of toil, to conserve energy so that the maximum of results are produced from the minimum of ia- bor, to perform work so thoroughly and intelligently that it is not useless and has to be done over, is the second teaching of my text. "Go to the ant. thou sluggsrd, consider her ways and be wise," does not allude any more to the ceasslsss activity of the 'ant than it does to her marvelous foresight, with \vhich_ she plans out her work and ac- complishes her results. The ant uses her brain as well as her mnndibies or legs. She uses her eyes to see where she is going us wel! as her feet to walk. Study the ant as an architect or a builder. Some of us have stood in awe before the architec- tural wonders of the cathedrals and the palaces of the east. We have secn walls and columns and domes and minarets and spires that are "frozen music in stone.” We have climbed the heights of Milan cathedral, whose tow- ers and waiisare people with almost us great numbers of apostles and saints and martyrs and priests carved in solid stone as there arc worshipers who ever gather at one time before its sacred shrines. We have seen St. Pe- ter's of Rome connected with the won- derful Vatican and St, Mark‘s, more poetic than the Venetian canals. We have seen the marvelous conceptions of a Christopher Wren and the wonderful structure at Cologne, only s. few years ago dedicated aftcr having consumed centuries in building. These transcend- ent buildings have lifted themselves up oven as did the temple of King Solo- mon. Why? Every bcam, every stone, had its appointed place. Each part, as rl smnll mite, fitted into n great united whole. But as I stand to-day before o. lvestminstcr Abbcy or a St. Paul of London I emphatically nsscrt that these structures conlpamed to thc strength and intelligence of the build- ers are not ns wonderful as an ordin- zlry, everyday, commonplace ant llivc we may see in filo country road. To build the Catllcdml of St. John the Divine in New York city blasting powder had to be used. 'l‘he founda- ltlons had to be excnvatedout of solid rock. True. But the ants often build their hives by excavating the solid rock. The walls of Canterbury cathe- ,ldrnl must be absolutely straight. True. But no mnson‘s plumb line cvcr crcctcfl sircighter walls than the walls of an nnt hill's chambers. The rooms of tho Vatican must be arranged in orderly I *fone laox‘ol=f\ nollvs l<|nNl;v - Plus cunrn nnorsv. Dropoy is not a disease in itself, as to do it. Ife busy. Bs busy!" The hu-! , many people believe, but is an evidence of very severe kidney' trouble. Dropsy is caused by watery particles oozing through the walls of the arteries when they are f distended by unusual pressure, which can 'only ba caused by obstructions in the kidneys. The symptoms of Dropsy are puilineea under the eyes, swelling of the feet and ankles, urine changed in character and appesrsnce, omothsring feeling from exertion or excitement. The only rational method of treating this diseue is to reach the kidneysaud restore them to a healthy condition. ll The most successful remedy for this purpose is Doen’| Kidney Pills. Read what Min Agnes Creeiman, Upper Bmith- vilie, 11.8., says of them :--"I caught a cold, which settled in my kidneys, and turned to dropsy. My face, limbo,_ and feet became bloated, and if I prhsed my Inger on them it would mah a white' impression that would int fully a minute before the duh regained its natural color. I was advised to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and found by their use that I wascnred in averyshort time. I have neyefiiad My trouble with it since. Price 60csnts.perbox,or8forl1.l. room has its eonnestiltg hallways. -5) well regulated' cathedral must have its proper system of drilnalm .-Theant hive is so built that it will shed all Wt tar. No rainstorm ‘ohm deluge its cSl iars. No water overflowing the river bank can destroy\a foundations. The ancient Qomanp always built their cities upon the Ililltopa for protection. The ants build their hives on high places. where storm and water cannot submergs them. - The a.nt's wisdom should be emulat- ed as much u her activity. The Ars.- bians held the e.nt's" wisdom in such rc- spect that after the birth of a male child they would place one of thols in- sects in the baby’l hand while they 'malls the eel-nest, prayer. “O God, may the oy tum out airolever and as wise, as the ant!" The human being who does not work with _inteililsnt fore- thought ia a useless and a. danlcrcul worker. Fire and steam ers alike po- tent. but the harm caused by impris- oned tire may be greater than thegood that is done by harnessed steam. Wili- ingness to labor will not weave togeth- er e. carpet unless intelligence has manufactured is loom _and a shuttle. The intelligence of the ant is startling- ly significant. It is as worthy of imita- tion us is her persovering energy. Snowshoes are useless in Florida. Cal- ico dresses are an absurdity in the Arctic. A ship’s ,keel luid in the centre of the western prairies had better be split up into kindlings. A telescope is utterly valueless except for the ,power of the brain which adapts the lens to the astronomer's eye. Be wise, be wise! Intelligent and wise architects are they. Yes. But study the ant as sol- diers and submissive members of their great co-operative social organizations. In o. factory the cogs fit into each oth- er. Because of this perfect fitting the great leather bands move round and the spindles ny, the elevators lift and the walking beams rise and tall, the hammers strike and the wheat is ground and the wood is cut, and the shoe and the dx andthe saw and the chair and tho stove are offered for sale by the city merchuntmen. Because of this same kind of perfect fitting of one mo.l‘l~l cogs into the cogs of other men it great multitude of human beings bs- comcs a. united creature of life called an army. Read 'ye the words of tho qenturion: "For I also um a. man under authority, having under me soldiers, und I say unto one. 'Gol' and ho goeth. and to another, 'Comet' and he cometh, nnd to my servant, ‘Do this,” and he doeth it." Thus, while we find that men as well as wheels may be set un- der uuthority, we find that ants are al- so set under authority. Every industrious human life that is successful always co-operates with other lives. Every ideal human or- ganization on ls. large scale must be 9. perfect hunlnn ant hive. Everywhere human talent should be specialized. \Vho.t especial niche ure you going to fill in thc great human bee hive? Wilcn I go and closely examine the _ S|||TH'S “illeai ilnoll lilillli '” ?_|'|'|.|||\ Bilil 53383. I o d have lul- . swsrcd. your iottcr socner, ut I wanted --i toscehow ouf'Bulith's scum slim. run slclt lclnlllals, mi, ,,,...,_,,.,, The Biadder,Bboa- of lhsmf I _lfaxvs not matism hnd the had rheumatlsm since. Blood-all than dis- I gave some of them to eases yield atonce and o young man hero and aroeguickly and fulli he took them, he could eu - Pros only uotwsllumllssyeus, cents a box. rllenndatisln A dl ` ¥`c°artl°y”:ll,:t'a=|dt:dl s usizg. Bmitgk B13; Q-on-f;»-»-»¢ ;.,;:1g, ,,~°,.,‘,f,';;:g= l"..l.f'°‘-. mt.. 1...... ’ rul in bm w.r.su||rll oo. ,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,_..°°'°' °‘ lash. f|anli..lllatn\l F- l'05'l'lB- To euro Constipation Biol bs and flims- l.°.°.:l4:.‘;'.'.:a“§lll.“'.>§..".'.*F.'.°-`.?.'l‘e.:z.l:."i °-° All _ Gtliiliil _ SHUI A Y/&*?`\§ _ - v - __I>.<_ mmmu_ ’.{<>X1>X1>.'<>..‘ =--=.=-, _ ` ;» E .- 4 f is :xii g” l 1// .~"`-"T»`>r2f _ -4. . 6'/9""/'»`>*->s'.‘='-:ri SHOR'ii\\ ElGll'i‘--nn nmttcr how little nt :t tilllc, lllnolulbl L0 it whoio lot. on lx yonr's buy- ing. Wuightiall lnrtttor tllui: wo wntch vory 1-urofllliy. Wo wnnt. to givo you the cxno woigllt ovcry tirno. lilltl there ill n,lly cl-rori llruiyzot. to be in vnllr favor. 0 YR GIi.(l(‘.l