9 J _ Immense Corn Stalks. â€"â€" We . hear _ that out German Mills friends dre _ olated %MM‘ vo&ut:l‘ corn . utaiks, ol ve; atâ€" ;,‘w mw'hdï¬t ot‘ over n se hi k bot a pretty north, but when you it down south even to Strasburg on 6 cotn plantation of Mr. Neil Wanâ€" "M«.i i‘st-‘t" iC Au «t l .vf;&n .-b',‘*“‘ % t U Shs hob V 9 ns i aite ns s d ) Plis M.;tw- e : svidenge, U" P pasonably be expected ‘to discours ies pos maey w ons Prictice.. T spite of notices posted against trese ig on their property as well as Pflflltn- forthe ‘same, the habit ol walking along â€" the company‘s + still continues with little or ?'ï¬mt.- That ‘the track on west side of King street is habitâ€" mally used by pedestrians may be acâ€" ‘®ounted for by its convenience, seeing ‘that there is ‘mo ‘crossing between Strange and King streets. The G. T. agent at Berlin, however, declares that notwithstanding that there are six crossiggs between King street and Conttland avenve inclusive, that . the Tailway track is constantly used by foot passengers between these points in‘ spite of the protests ~of the. comâ€" pany against the practices A firstâ€" wlass cement sidewalk along Victoria street from King to Weber streets Wd no doubt to a great extent diâ€" wert the present foot traffic from the railway track along this street. The increased business of the Grand ‘Trunk at Berlin necessitated the exâ€" tension of their freight yards across King street to the west, and now there are three tracks actoss the #treet where formerly there was only one. Thus the Yost accident occurred in what is now the G. T. R. freight yard. What ever objection may . be taken to running engines with the tender in front on the main line or branches, no one can take exception to rumning shunting engines cither way: while in the yards, seeing it is impossible for them to turn around every time a car is shunted. This being the case travellers are in conâ€" stant jeopardy of being confronted by an engine crossing King street with its tender cither in front or rear at any â€" moment. Conditions are such that it is high time something be done, cither by building an overhead bridge on Waterloo street, or a subâ€" way on King, in order that the life a@nd limbs of persons crossing at this point may receive due protection. In the mean time the suggestion of the Coroner‘s jury to place gates at this @angerous crossing should be carried out. LAND BOOMSINPERTH VILLAGES Stratford â€" Beacon: â€" A Stratford gentleman who has ‘made a driving tour through the northern townships of this county during the past week reports great activity in real estate in the villages along the route of the Guelphâ€"Goderich railway. _ Millbank, which long before the advent of the Stratfordâ€"Wiarton line was laid out as a town site, and was a flourishing trade, centre until Newton, the railâ€" way station, attached the greater part of its trade, is now renewing its growth with the prospect of the new line running through it. Property has advanced in value and building operaâ€" tions are brisk. A house which sold a year ago for $300, brought an offer the other day ol $1,500. Monkton, on the boundary of Elma and Logan, through which the line will pass, is also enjoying & boom and Milverton is expecting benefits from a competing line, though the cutting off of the trade from the viâ€" cinity of Monkton, which now comes to Milverton, may be a disadvantage difficult to overcome. The people all along the line ate, nevertheless, very ml of benefits, and with this o prevalent a considerable step is taken towards achieving them. (Too late for last issue.) Briefs. â€" Harvest is almost a thing Of the past. Fall wheat is a poor gample, but spring crops are very fair. _The‘ heavy rains keep things m; nicely. â€" A young man well in our burg, who resides in z“eonty town and should know when in our village, conducted himselt as though he were in a Neaâ€" country. ~ Remember the Sabâ€" bath, young man, and keep it holy. poran ie ce oo s t t us T ?â€"Pumnl â€" Mrs. Isaac Swartz and zm. Eva, and Mrs. Joseph Cleâ€" ; of ‘(Mich., are visiting friends in : néighborhood.â€"Miss Katie of Hanover, is . visiting here. Sagt jou. can s¢e plants that stretch one end of a ten foot pole : to COrB. WILLIAMSBURG SENATOR‘S OPINION : The liberal extracts are taken fl:? paper read by Mr, Johansen, â€" director of manual ‘ m in Montreal, belore ~the ian Educational Asspciation in Winnipeg. Mr. Johansen‘s subject was, ‘‘Three: Years of Manual Trainâ€" ‘""Whil . Dg, as & Pec nized branch of mh! school tion is compatatively new . it hay passed the . “.’h ““Mp 4 * F es of the there is good. reason to believe..A start has been made in %\m'h Quebec and in the Eastâ€" era inces, and the results . have been so uniformly successful that its general adoption is only a matter of ‘a â€" comparatively short time. â€" The West ‘has yet to take up the noveâ€" ment, and I. will be pleased if these ‘remuh ol mine have something. to do with hastening the. iutroduction ‘o! the â€" system into the Canadian West. â€" The ‘introduction of manual trainâ€" ing in the curriculum of elementary schools in Canada . was the inevitable result of that feeling,. long entertainâ€" ed, but most strongly expressed durâ€" ing the last decade, for & change in pedagogical methods. There was a strong desire for the introduction of what is known as the new eduuqon, or what was in rul{tty the same thing, to revive that method of direct teaching which was in use long ago. Our system of ‘education had been too bookish, to mechanical and far too oneâ€"sided in its scope and applicaâ€" tion. The two great pathways to the brainâ€"the hand and eye were alâ€" most entirely negleeted. Only a few years ago school books were almost entirely devoid of illustrations, school rooms .were without decoration, the walls without pictures. The road to learning was hemmed in with high, blank walls. The way seemed long and uninviting to the youthful spirit, Our ideas underwent a revolution, and the change paved the way for the introduction of manual training. WORKING TOWARD THE LIGHT. ~‘"In the early days of education the ear was supposed to be the chief orâ€" gan for mental development. The ear therefore was the road through which information must . enter. It was through this channel were poured in whole volumes of dates, historical facts, gedgraphical terms and definiâ€" tions, arithmetical rules, spelling, rules for reading, and the mass of unâ€" digested facts which in these days made up education. The memory was overloaded, and refused to carry the strain beyond a certain limit. After long years, it began to dawn upon some teachers that the ear was being abused, and the eye was, pressed into service. Pictures were used and obâ€" ject lessons came into being. The child was allowed to see as well as hear what was being taught. In its turn the eye was abused. Later still another advance was made. The hand was to be utilized to assist the eye and ear. The child in addition to being told that birch is a hard wood, may now see and handle for himself the piece of timber, and learn from personal experience that it is so. Here I wish to utter a word of warnâ€" ing. _ Manual training is not everyâ€" thing. It alone is not the summum bonum of educational development or discovery. Unless it is recognized that not the action of one sense, but of all the senses working together is necéssary for the highest educftional development, the hand will suffer abâ€" use in its turn. All the sense activiâ€" ties must be combined in the acquireâ€" ment of knowledge®n order to get the greatest and best mental developâ€" ment. We must remember we are not making certain objects for the beneâ€" fit of having them, but as a means of training, developing and informing the judgment. They are simply the means; the end is to Secure a general sense training, to give the mind the habit of accuracy.. From a utilitarâ€" ian point of view, and this cannot be too highly emphasized, they prepare the pupil for practical lifr by developâ€" ing his powers and selfâ€"confidence in such a way as will incvitably be of great service to him in after years, no matter what his position in life may be. M s f ‘‘It has been urged by sume against manual training that it is usbful as an edutational adjunct only in cities and towns, that country boys and girls do not requite it. If we look upon manual training solely as labor such a remark may be justified, but we are confident that wherever the system has been intruduced it is lookâ€" ed upon very diffetently. ‘The. main object of manual training is to make boys and girls think, to invent, to be exact, to persevere, to see the full value o:’ dnwlnlf. a‘:fl many other things. Drawing is a living language. ‘Those who call manual training â€" a fad or an experiment have never givâ€" en it a trial, and perhaps have never even seen a training centre Of a class at work. ‘They have ‘not seen the happy faces of boys and gitls‘ when the _day comes fot their manual mg lesson. Those who are: . so *o fotm epinions, on #ï¬ &re â€" A with | 1 i on n mant dn in mt trme ols ie W the on DUCTION 1NTO| CANADA ontlining briefly the history ol Mr: Johansen mt Eren can Mlfl- q"mtmu importâ€" ance every receive the ‘beneft of a~ course ‘of â€" manual m thus providing more artisâ€" ans and‘ lessening the Overcrowding in the underpaid cletical professious. . Aug. 18, â€" PersOH@is. â€" Dr. ©GeO. Buigh, is home front (h8 Northwest. â€"Mr. Edwin Schicthols, of Berlin, is visiting ‘his parents here.â€"Mr. P Christman, of Streator, ‘2'" is visitâ€" z'hh mother in towh. & Mr. â€"and Sot. Pby, ~of St. Thomas, ‘are visiting relatives and friends in town. â€"Master Charles Mitchell. is ‘visiting friends in / London and . Stratford.â€" Mr. K. Bulgin, ol ‘Indianapolis, Ind., is visiting his motber in town.~ Mt, Bulgin is studying law in the Indian: apolis University. . t x Home From the West.â€"Mr. Wm. G. Ziegler, of Calgary, Alberta, accoinâ€" panied by his wile and child, arrived here last Friday.. They intend _ to spend about two. months with his parents here. ; Notes.â€"â€"Tne Eimira school board is again advertising for teachers, as three of those formeriy engaged ciâ€" ther resigned or had other ncgools enâ€" gaged before chearing from Elmira. Miss Heller, of St. Jacobs, has since been . engaged, and two others ate wanted . * Rev. C. Berth, of Staten Island, who arrived here last Monday on a visit to relatives and friends, . will preach in the Floradale Lutheran church next Sunday morning, after an absence of twentyâ€"six years as pastor old Lord Strathcona is in his 83rd year. Senator Wark, at 100, is the oldest legislator in Canada‘or the Empire. Canada has 6,000 lawyers. George Brown has been déad 24 years. of that church. In the,evening he will occupy the pulpit of St. Paul‘s Lutheran church. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lurkbardt and their two youngest daugnters, Viola and Lillian, and Mr. Andrew Luckâ€" hardt and son, of Chatanooga, Tenn., started Tucsday morning on a . nroâ€" longedâ€" trip to Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle and other points. Sit Charles Tupper is in year. Thomas D‘Arey Magee was assasinâ€" ated April 7, 1868. & _The eAcursion to f‘lingan Falls last Saturday was a huge suceess, ovet 700 tickets being sold. f FACTS ABOUT SOME PEOPLE Goldwin Smith is in his vear. McGill College was founded by Hon. Mr. McGill in 1813. William Lyon Mackenzie was â€" the first mayor of Toronto. â€" Alexander Mackenzie has been dead 12 vears. Sir John A. Macdonald has been dead 13 years. â€" â€" General Wolie is buried at Greenâ€" wich, England. â€" Lieutenantâ€"governor Simcoe is burâ€" ied in Exeter Cathedral. King Edward visited Canada as Prince ol Wales in 1860. 25,000 United Empire tered Canada. Some men can‘t head a procession even when they dic. _ y The early patrol wagon catches the late lusher. 4 The bill collector is usually the first to find ‘a man out.. Many agirl with teeth like pearls is as dumb as an oyster. A matried man sorfetimes orders cold tongue in a .restaurant by way of variety. § « The queer actions of lovers may be due to the fact that kisses are intoxâ€" fcating. 0 > _ P has The girl who declares she can‘t sing is often guilty of unintentionalâ€" truthâ€" fulness. ¢ Onions are recommended as a cure for indigestion, but as yet there ‘has been no cure discovered for baions. Montreal Gazette, ‘The® Rutik was one of the Russian ships which sunk the Japanese transâ€" port in the Corean sea and left a lot of ‘the people on board to drown . The other day its own crew was taken from. it as it went . down, %t& Japanese whom.it had been timg with. The Christian spirit in this inâ€" mu\ruvm by . the â€" non. NOTHING â€" (ON. THE â€" MARKET BQUAL To cflAnm:l?N'S is nanOEE Nee Sir Wilfrid Laurier is 83 years old. Sir Richard Cartwright is 69 years [M * Eapoas.‘. Judge; . Geot Thistact is . well known to drugâ€"| Aemelive Irvi iste ovarywhere, and nine out of ten{conrt;. < D. 8 CHRISTIANLIKE PAGANS the TO THE POINT ELMIRA Loyalists enâ€" cightieth his 83rd a v"a ""V“m' »w time of. the .corperâ€"stone Jaying . in ‘185% and "the events which led up ; it, he %uâ€_’tqfl as il . they had wfl. ‘Only a few days : Ber= ,b m’e:‘alu .M'fln‘;;: w scattered. ings ‘& all pog ellow, Fod, white and grey. There were only hall a dozen btlek}gllfl#. and : ouly one ~of â€" two "ktoreys. s was next door west ol the present Journal ofâ€" fice. â€" On the site of the present fire ball there. was a twoâ€"storey: framg building with a small steeple. ~This was used as a town ‘halland for reâ€" tigious services; and flbrv,xmnt |lcbol house. The Central 1 on Fredetick® street was a oneâ€"storey ibuildm; painted yellow hnd was nearâ€" or the street than the present buildâ€" ing. There was another school house on the southâ€"east corner of the Menâ€" nonite burial: ground in the east end. It was a oneâ€"storey building painted red, w Berlin had then two furniture facâ€" tories, One owned by Hofiman and Co., on the site of the Merchants‘ Bank, and the other owned by Noab Ziegler, where the Anthes factory now stands: There was a foundry on the eorner now occupied by the Econâ€" omical Block, and from it Foundry )nreet took its name. Berlin T in 1852 between 700 and 800 inhabiâ€" tants. is decided to â€" es ts sois ns uke events .. # id ‘ had bun'deci‘d upon form nm esting subject, and Jew ‘people afe so couversant with it as Sherifl Mots, He gave the fotlowing: reminiscences in this â€" connection to the Telegraph Aiter a long fight Waterloo County in 1852 seceded from the old district comprising Waterloo, Wellington and Grey. The citizens of Berlin exerted themselves to have Berlin selected as the county seat. Berlin was entitled to it on account of its central locaâ€" tion. â€" Galt also endeavored to be made the county town and so did Preston and Waterloo village. _ The Idading men of Berlin finally succeedâ€" ed in their efforts. The news that Berlin had been seâ€" lected was telegraphed one night in March from Toronto to Brantford, there being no telegraphs in this part of the province. The news was brought to Berlin by two colored ridâ€" ers, , who came to Bex’l]in' on horseâ€" back, riding all night. the news was spread early in the morning the bells on the two furniture factories; which still do service, were rung, processions were formed and there was shooting of guns, pistols and anvils. ‘The latter were used because there was no cannon in Berlin then. That was a great day for Berlin. On the following 8rd of May _ the provisional County Council met for the first time in the Township Hall in Berlin. This building was afterâ€" wards remodelled and became Trinity Methodist Church, and is now St. Matthew‘s Lutheran Church. The building had also been at one time eccupied by Peter Eby, publisher of the Telegraph, and the Germanâ€"Canâ€" adian. ( The members of the County Council were:â€"Dr. John Scott and Henry Snyder, reeve and deputyâ€"reeve, . of Waterloo township; John Ernst and Anthony Kaiser, Wilmot; John Meyâ€" er and Peter Winger, Woolwi‘?x; *John Hawk and Gabriel Hawk, cmle}'; Duncan Ferguson and Dr. M Tge, North _ Dumfrics; Absalom Shade, reeve of Galt; and Jacob Hespeler, reeve of Preston. Berlin bhad not yet been incorporated as a village. The majority of the new County Council were for at once going ahead with the erection of the county buildâ€" ings, but the Galt and Preston memâ€" bers were opposed to it. It was deâ€" cided, hoiveverrrn a vote of 9 to 3, to go ahead. Messrs. Mellish & Rusâ€" sell got the contract for the building for $20,000, and on June 29th the corner stone was laid. ~ This was another gala day for Berâ€" lin. After a procession through the village the people gathered at the building site, where Dr. Scott delivâ€" ered an address and placed a tin box containing documents, . newspapers, coins, ete., in a hollowed out stone, placed a’::ther stone n:n Btop of it, and appl mortar. th band furnished music. c;nonf::w were fired, a cannon having been cast in the foundry after Berlin hadâ€" been thosen as the county seat, and in the evening there was a banqguet in the township ball, when . Jonathan Bowâ€" man was mm& a silver suuft box suitably , for his valued services as member for the old dis triet, on behalf of. the new county, â€" In January, 1853, the officials _ of the new ‘county were appointed and from then on Waterloo county had Tts own municipal administration.~ ‘The officials â€" appointed. by ~the County Council. wereâ€"Dr. Scott, . warden; William Ddvidson, clark; Carl H. Abâ€" rens, y treasurer. BECOMES COUNTY SEAT the Geortge . Davidson, â€" sheriff Irving. glerk© of the coun ts wuo ."Lonlu for Umi C ;Act coples of iwl n:lâ€::t“odiédl. as 1 books, be aC mg e in n CC D avl f .lu 76’ .u!?.t?' ",‘, ;&' :'»‘i Aae ’\\‘s) '&:&‘ i. 5"’ ‘A.’ ho dhat Tnlands 4 . ow Thesn Aeures Show 2 tal â€" 0 r J ts miman iactnae was 2,473, and Wd« m 170,888â€"a 1 increase on the ten years. However, there has been a slight drop. For 1901 the sets W 8,110, the single numâ€" 199,067 I+ w" it of these sets rather more han a were published m and foreign lrwmn-uu added it wfll'bo seen what a harvest flows to Museum, +4 14 &y. %’h‘ ï¬nnrg ol newspaper history in which the tish flwm is so rich, will, it goes without saying, abide where they are. . Nobody is likely to beé consulting the Mercurious Gallobelgicus of, 1588, in the sense in which â€" files are usually consulted. That copy of the forerunner of newsâ€" papers, as it is regarded, stands by itself a strange curiosity, .. So does the, spurious English Meroutie â€" of about the same period, and . the Weekly News of full thirty years latâ€" er. ‘ The Mercurius Politicus of Sepâ€" temiber 2, 1658, had &n account ol the death of Oliver Cromwelo. . By January, 1661, the Mercurius Pubâ€" licus was describing the bhanging of the bodies ol Cromwell and Ireton. Between times the restoration . had come, and on May 30, 1660, the Merâ€" curius Publicus reuorted the proclamâ€" ation of Charles II. &s King. . Then Sir Roger L‘Estrange was editing the Intelligencer in August, 1663, and by 1665, the Oxford Gazette, which afterwards became our trusty London Gazette, was being issued. It does not describe fires nowadays, but in its eightyâ€"filth number it gave an account of the g‘rut fire of Lonâ€" don. If Mr. Pulitzer could only get those wonderful back numbers across :the Atlanticâ€"#hich be is not in the least likely to doâ€"they might afford hints to : the student?!min his. proposed school of journalism. ‘Quite American ift its way was the idea of the Flyâ€" ing Post, on December 16, 1695, of leaving half its sheet vacant , so that subscribers might write their :own news ‘when they sent the papet to {riends. They have one cent papers in America, but there was a London Fatthing Post at so remote a date as December, 1718. If that was the first farthing paper, the Daily Courâ€" ant of March, 1702 or 1703, is be Heyed: to have been the first daily. You might read the story of the Stamp Act and its abolition on the face of the newspaper files at . the British Museum. "Junius‘s" first letter is there in the Public Adverâ€" tiser, and the Times, ten years after it had begun to appear, reports a case whete & man was fined £5 for letting people sit in his rooms and reaq his papers at a charge, of a nenny each. f The prompt results produced . by Chamberlain‘s ‘ Colic, Cholera â€" and Diarrhoea‘ Remedy together with its pleasant taste have won for it a place in many households. . Mr. W. T. Taylor, a merchant of Winslow, Ala., arites: _ "I hate used Chamberlain‘s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy: myself and also with men on . my placé, for diarrhoea and colic and it always gives reliefl promptly and pleasantly.‘ _ For sale by all drugâ€" COLIC ‘AND _ DIARRHOEA â€" A REMEDY THAT IS PROMPT AND PLEASANT. gists MORE THAN SATISFIED wITH1 ZION CITY Mr. Alex. Goutlay, who left ~Sebâ€" ringville last April to take up chis residence in Zion City as a disciple of Alex. Dowie, was in the city. toâ€" day. â€" He has been in Dorchester for: the past two months, visiting relaâ€" tives, and will return to Zion City, accompanied by Mrs. Gourlay, next week, taking‘ with him his househoid effects to occupy a house he has purâ€" chased there. ; ‘‘ Mr. Gourlay told ‘The Beacon that he found Zion City all and more than ‘he éxpected. TIlis health was uï¬ lent, and he was perfectly satisfc with ‘his investments there. _ There ‘had , Ne said, ‘an outbreak . of }uum in the city, but the affected persons â€" were promptly quas ned and there was no contagion ho A ie d To id t wiee * a Â¥ in Te im nanmaed tun . over by.a tral tot Bentbhs : ) / >..)> > )* .0 5.6 ts 6. oo ol PB SUPPORT hicitviget A Int of Boys two soite, in check and stripe tweoeds, . also x orsieds, dd“?%mfl&'w s and 4 ars double breasted. _ We will I rh now antil ‘The balanee left (if uny) will then be put is stock again at the re e Lhe following is s +~mplete let, subject to change every dag:â€" â€" * "â€" _ / 4 rnite, aizes 26, 28, regular price #2 75 fof . . .. .......â€"<» . â€"â€"â€"»*«4+»=a2. 5 § /« «» 22, 23, 24, regular price $3 fOf ... ... ....«..4»«»»+*»@4@e» 9 .® _ 28, 24, 25, 26, 27, regular price #3 50 for..........~» ..... ' 7 .: +( ©28, 23, 214, 26, regular price §3 75 for..............~.».»» 21,08 24 13 6 = _ 4@ 24,25,28, regular BC NE : . <a Â¥1 + < snaran 4n a «en * in 4w BM 1 °W >‘ 4 28.nflhmflh............................... ; 1 4 ~â€"â€"**â€"U#, TBURIAF $ 100 9P O AOLC .. «<~ 1 ««â€" «+ «y « on +« <spas Fan awa A total of 93 of the best anits that have ever been offered for the Come eatly. L Â¥ S.SAUDER & CO., # d e *3 t Clearing Sale. of Boys Suit AT RXACTLY HALE PRKE _ 11 A holiday onting none should miss. Special excursions over *‘ all lines of travel. For information, prize lists, &c., address. aS2 Improvements all along the liné.. Exhibits unsurpassed. . * & ATTRACTIONS THE BEST YETâ€"Kitamura‘s Celebrated Jap Troupe of 10 people, The Flying Banvards, and the best Gymâ€" neste, Acrobate, and other specialties that mcney can precure. FIVE EVENING®â€"OF EIREWORKS, concluding each even iuy wich a realistic representation of the § , PROBLEM OF THE SCOTTI8SH 1}; KING STREET LT.â€"COL. W M. GARTSHORE, 32â€"2t Presi Scotland is no nearer the solution of ber great Free Church dilemma: The victorious Highland minority reâ€" fuse to surrender any part of what the judgment of the House of Lords has given them in trust funds and buildings, except on the condition that the majority retract the whole dottrinal progress upon which they most pride themselves. Thus a. maâ€" jority of the church is still eAposed to what they call spoliation. In Edâ€" inburgh 23,000 worshippers are deâ€" pr:ved of thurches, fiftyâ€"five ministers occupy their homes on sufferance, and the victorious minority has not a single minister within a radius of twenty miles to fill the gap. In Glasgow, 103 congregations, with 70,â€" 000 membership, are in a similar preâ€" dicament. Magnificent free church missions, inyolving ah annualâ€"expenditure . of $250,000 and 304 European and 344 native missionaries, pass to twentyâ€" éight Highland ministers who have neither funds norâ€" missionaties. Parâ€" liament is just (rising with more thought of grouse shooting than the A New $10,000 Dairy Building London, September 9th to 17th, 1904. ENTRIES CLOSE 8th SEPTEMBER _ â€" It makes light ‘the laters of ‘wasbing. irns : wash day into play day. Bottor than unylnw WESTERN FAIR "Lot the GOLD DUST twins co your work«" Snow white ofothes ¢tro tho rogulit of using l "Bombardment of Port Arthur" more meore ocescâ€"aicals President. A little forethought may save you no end ol trouble. Anyone ‘who makes it a rule to ‘keep Chamberâ€" lain‘s Colic, Choler& and. Diarrhoea Remedy at hand knows this to be a fact. For sale by all druggists.. church crisis, and will do nothing. No way out has yet been suggested beyond the temporary expedient of an ‘emergency fund, which has. al~ ready reached $180,000. » C ‘‘Butâ€" that is not impossible,"‘ said Blanche, Kate‘s clever sister.. How did the gardener plant the trees ? ‘‘Father has given the 31‘&& an. impossible task," said Kate. wH ‘"‘He has given him nine appleâ€" trees, and told him to plant them so that there will be ten row# ofthree." Of these, 10,000 United Empire Loyalists entered Upper Canada. 5,000 Acadians were exiled in 1755; Sir Isaac Brock is buried at Queenâ€" ston Heights. as $ Men love women less than they love to have women_love them. HOW DID HE PLANT THEM t J. A. NELLES, * Secretary. BERLN t# i