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Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la m^thodc 1 2 3 22X 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 p 'M^' '''^jF^i^'^^ ' :^S!!^^^'^^^^mmi^- '» "fii . ' i . ..Jk 1 i %|.|---*-.^.^.ly'ff;;' 1 I ■iniiniffl'fflO ^ O^HAWA BOOK OF... ^uetatiens .1900.».^ HSS li pf.-' -I Ljotati on S' 1. A. E. Annis, Drydeu, Algouia :— '• The heights by great men reached and kent. Were uot attained by sudden light, Kilt they, while their compauiohs slent, Were toiliup upward in the night. — Longfellow. 2. Mr.s. A. E. Annis, Dryden, Algoma :— His love is constant as the sau Though clouds oft come between, And could our faith but pierce those clouds. It might be always seen. ;i. Clara Annis, Drydeu, Algoma :— It will always help me to bo kind and true. It I ask in earnest "What would Jesus rlo?" 4. A. W. Annis, Toronto,— All things I thought I knew, But -low confess The more I know, I know I know the le.s8. —Dr. Oweu. o. M. B. Annis, Toronto,— — E. D. Eggleston. ti. Mrs. M. B. Annis,— 'Tis alone of his appointing That our feet on thorns have trod, buttering, pain, renunciation, Only bring us nearer God. —Robert Collyer. O. Abraham,— kind oniobihTy ^' '"'^''''^ ''''^ '' ^^"«'-«"'' ^"""i *his is the best ■'' —Plato. H. Edgar W. Allin Trinity College, Toronto,- eartl. ^rol"^.!'"'"'^ hath been given unto me in heaven and on the world ' ^^'^^ ^°'' "'"''''^y' «^«» ""*" the end of —Jesus the Christ. !»• Mrs. O. E. Alfred,— To have what we have is riches, but to be able to do without, — Geui'go Macdonald. 7. is power UNIVHKm 10. Adrian R. H. Alfred, Sargeou.U. S. Navy,— We all are sculptors lu this world of ours, There's not a hand but may some image form That, when the Master comes to view our tiisk. Shall from His lip receive approval warm. If, when the Master comes, He find The block untouched, the form left incoirnlete. But dust and fragments or some hideous sht.pe, Alas, how shall we then that Master meet? — Lyman C. Smith. 17. 11. Mrs. Estelle Scott Alfred,— Not in the clamor of the crowded street, Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng But in ourselves are triumph and defeat. — Longfellow. Vi. Flossie Armstrong, — Howe'er it be, it seems to me 'Tis only noble to be good. Kind hearts are more than coronets. And simple r'aith than Norman blood. — 'J ennyson. 13. Wesley Ashton, — 'Tis easy enough to be pleasant. When everything goes like a song. But the man worth while Is the man with a smile, When everything goes dead wrong. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. 18. C so !on verge 19. h 30. E. 14. Mamie Adams, — Oh, wad some pow'r the giftie gie us, To see oursel's as ithers see us ! It wad frae monie a blunder free us And foolish notion ; What airs in dress an' g.iit wad lea'e us And e'en devotion ! — Burns. 15. Wm. Anderson, — Disguise our bondage as we will . 'Tis woman, woman rules us still. — Moore. 16. Mrs. Wm. Anderson. — It may be glorious to writ« Thoughts that shall glad the two or three High souls, like those far stars that come i;. sight Once in a century ; But better far it is to speak One simple word which now and then Shall waken their frae nature in the weak And friendless sous of men. — J. R. Lowell. 21. Ge 22. Mr 23. Mrs |4 i ■■it ). ige form r tiisk, rm. ^oirnlete, shc^pe, leet? man C. Smith. ■eet, i throng feat. — Longfellow. lod. ig. ■Tennyson. nft r . ,* -i / 24. Addie M. Broad, Haydou,— Let your truth stand sure, and the world is true ; Let you heart keep pure and the world will too. —Houghton. 25. Mrs. M L. Argall,— The Lord God is a sun and shield , He will give grace and glory. And no good thing will he withhold From those who walk uprightly. —Bible. Fred. J. Bailes,— "Tis better to say, "This thing I do," tJian, "These things I 36. dabble in." -Pleasant Hours. 37. J. Beunet,- It is not growing like a tree. In bulk doth make men better be. 28. J. H. Butler,— To thine own self be true, and it must follow as the night the day, thou can'st not then be false to any man. —Shakespeare. 39. Geo. R. Burt,— Were I so tall to reach the pole, i Or grasp the ocean with my span, I must be measured by my soul ; The mind's the standard of the man. ..^ „ —Watts. 30. Mrs. Geo. Burt,— It is well to know that attempted things. Are counted and crowned by the king of kings. 81. Georgie Burt,— Jesus loves me, this I know. —Anna Warner. 32. Mrs. Frank Brathwaite,— Our doubts are traitors And make us lose the good we oft might win By fearing to attempt. — Shakespeare. 38. Frank Brathwaite,- "Our enemies come nearer the truth in their judgments of us than we do in our judgments of ourselves." — La Rochefoucauld. 34. Annie Burgoyne, — There is a power in the direct glance of a sincere and loving soul, which will do more to dissipate prejuduce and kindle charity than the most elaborate arguments. — George Elliot. 35. Edith Bongard,— Be good, my dear, and let who will be clever ; Do noble things, not dream them, all day long ; And so make life, death and the vast foievei' One grand, sweet song. —Charles Kings lev £V' trld is true ; d will too. — Houghton. Id, hold —Bible. m, "These thiugs I Pleasant Hours. le. ow as the uight the — Shakespeare. [)au, » e man. —Watts. id things, ) king of kings. Anna Warner. ft might win jeare. heir judgments of La Rochefoucauld. sincere and loving and kindle charity -George Elliot. ;lever ; day long ; )rever Charles Kingsley ;^. Arthur Hale,— the .eSe^r'^S'h^ own'f«cl'''^J^;:;S,^r'^ back ,,o every .nan look .sonrly upon yo," smile .t it J... wiH, L^ '^"^ '^ ^^'1'. '" turn a j.)lly and kind cnrnpaniol, "^ ^'^^ '^ *"" -Thackery"'^ '^ 37. John Bailes, - —Goethe. ;«. Mrs. John Bailes,— — Alice Gary. 3S) Cha.s. R. Bailes. - Tho.se friends thou hast, and their adoption tried Grapple them to thy soul with hoops of st^el- ' But (Jo not dull thy mini with entertainment Of each newhatchecf. unfledged comrade Beware Of entrance to a quarrel, hut being in. ^f^^'ire Bear t that the opposed may beware of thee Give every man thy ear. but few thy voice ?' Take each man's censure, but reserv-e thy judgment Costly thy habits as thy purse can buy. •'"'*»'"«»<^' But not express'd ui fancy ; rich, not g ludy • For the apparel oft proclaims tlie man '' ' Mrs. A. Blarney,- -«hake.speare (Hamlet.) can nX^: -l^iS jr^'i;^ '^^ '- "-^ajsi^s^- wi,, i 41 F. Bowden,— n,..t the .sha'^t '.."'^i^t u^;:!.', ^ '• -Itev. M. I). Tohnan. 5y. Mrs. J. Carter, - Sbt> has done what she could. («). (". R Carter, - Lives of great nu'ti all remind us We can inako our lives sublime Ami, departing, leave behind us J-ootpiints on the sands of Time Let us. then, be up and doing. With a heart for .uiy fate f Still achieving, still pursuing. Learn to labor and to wait. Bible. «1. another. :! M F. Cross, - Life ev-erv man holds dear, but the brave man Molds honor far more precious, dearer than life. fi4. Mrs. Cross, -Shakespeare. For forms of government let fools contest ; Whate er is best administered is best • 1 or modes of faith let graceless zealots fight. His can t be wrong, whose life is in the right. -Pope. (io. Mary Curtis,- Labor, wide as the earth, has its summit in heaven. — Carlvle. <)«. Mrs. M. A. Childs,— themau'^ ""*" ""''^ P""'" ™'''* together; the Lord is the maker of —Bible. (57. A. .7. Curtis,— climes^''''^^''''** ''^"'^ ^'■''""'^ '^'"°* "P *" ^^^'^ «""• ^^e Pi-«dnct of all — Addison. I. ,1 ■■1 68. Mrs. Church,— Experieuce is by industry iichieved, Aud perfected by the swift course of time. —Shakespeare. «!). Mr. Johu Cowan,— thfi H,Sf ''"'''' ^'^\ ^*. **'^ ^""""^ o* '^^ ^^""la" knowledge, and Hn vvf ?. , 'T '^e"*^t^«*e, the nearer we arrive unto it, For What do we truly know, or wliat can we clearly affirm, of any one of S'sirvTe'b"uV/""tf' upon which all our^ea.onini'1L"r ot mTnd? built.-time aud space, hfe and death, matter and — Coltou. 70. K. E. Carswell,— the fiestirno?o7 gS"' '"'''''''"' "°* *^"* "^^^"^ ^'''''' i^.??"'« ^^ — rsible. 71. Alice Dingle,— stinri -Llnlf^nf F^^'t"""^ '" *^'** '^o'"^^ i« "°^ so much where we stand .18 in what direction we are moving. — o. W. Holmes. 7a. Reba Dingle- shadow^"*''' ^"^ ""''" '^"'^ ''''"^' ^^""'^ ^" ^"^ ^'•^'''^ •'^"d cast a —Thomas Brown. 73. May Dingle,— But n,^n ' wl ?!7r" ™''" ^'"'^ ^''^^ '^ ^^ ^os^ ""« •»« liath another. inadeTp agSn "^ ""' '""'' '' '^^ '^^ ^'^^* ^^^ l^T ^'^^ '"^^^ ^^ *^ " — Chrysostom. 74. Norman DingJe,— Life is a service : the only question is, whom will we serve? ^K »* , T^. , — F- W. Faher. 75. Mrs. J. Dingle,- I shall be satisfied when I awake in His likeness. —Bible. 76. Ina Drew, — "Go back to thy garden plot, swe< t heart, Go back e'er the evening fall. And bind thy lilies, and train thy vines Till for thee the Master call. Go niake f hy garden a.s fair as thou canst. Thou workest never alone. Perchance he, whose lot is Lext to thine. May see it and mend his own ; -^"4,,*^^? "ext may copy his, sweet heart. Till all grows fair and sweet. And when the Master comes at eve, Happy faces His coming will greet. Then .shall thy joy be full, sweet heart. In the garden so fair to see. In the Master's words of praise to all Is a look of His own for thee " —Mrs Ch-irles HO. e. — Shakespeare. nan knowledge, and B unto it. For what affirm, of any one of •easonings must of death, niatttr and — Col ton. us Christ is come in —Bible. so much where we -O. W. Holmes. I groat and cast a Chomas Brown. le he hath another, le lass can never be — Chrysostom. m will we serve ? — F. W. Faber. :enes8. heart, les, anst, ine, art, -Bible. t, —Mrs. Charles. 77. Kate A. Dinney,— By different methods, diflf'rent men excel • But where is he that can do all things well. 78. H. T. G. Dreyer,- -Churchill. The beings of the mind are not of clay • lissentially immortal, they create ' "a '""^*'P^y in as a brighter ray And more beloved existence ; that which Fate Prohibits to dull life, in this our state Fir«f Zf^lf Jjo"'''*^^' by these spirits supplied *irst exiles, then repleves what we hate ; AM wltL"! ftlu'^^""^ '''^r« «'J'-ly fl""'^'-^ have died. And with a fresher growth replenishing the void. 7f». Marietta L. Dingle,- -Byron. The Light that is Felt. A tender child of summers three feeeking her little b--^ at night Paused on the dark ir timidly, 'Oh, mother ! Take my hand,' .said she And then the dark will all be light.' We older children grope our way *rom dark behind to dark before : And only when our hands we lav Dear Lord, in Thine, the night is day. And there is darkness nevermore. Reach downward to the sunless days Wher. in our guides are blind as we An I faith is small, and hope delays ; Take Thou the hands of prayer we raise And let us feel the light It &eeT ''-j. a Whittier. HO. Ethel L. Drew,— Say „o( the Father hath not hear" yS^r'™ ' ' You shall have year tolre, sometime," oKhere psf ^jKsr.ehrhX.c- ™ ""-^^ AmK''''"T n"?'"» '^* "'« Shrine Of „rayer And glory shall descend, sometime, somewhere H^^w'''"'''*/''*; ^'"t'' «*»""* be unanswered Her feet are firmly planted on the Rock. Amid the wildest storms she stands undaunted Nor quails before the loudest thunder shS' She knows Omnipotence has heard her r mver And cries -It shall be done, sometime somewhere.' —Ophelia G. Browning, 9 ■ PWJ I '-'^PWiiliM 'J 84 «1. MissDowus,— For still lu mutual suflferance lies, i he secret of true living, Lotb scarce is love, that uever knows, i he sweetness of forgiving. —John G. Whittier. 82. Mrs. M. E. Dickie — 8*i. Caroline Day, — Affection is the broadest basis of a good life. •Mf T^i ^. —George Elliott. Mrs. Edna Dingle, W SoseTl^'irforT ""'''V'' AowerloreVch o7us blows ; e cnoobe the lily for aye, or forever we choose the rose. —James Buckham. Miss E. P. Davidson,— 111 men whom men condemn as ill 1 hud so much of goodness still ; In men whom men pronounce divine 1 hnd so much of sin and plot ; I hesitate to draw tlie line Between the two where God has not. — Joachin Miller. 86. Mrs. R. Davidson,— No tasks thy God hath given thee Can I to tliee unfold ; And did I know, perchance 'twere best i'o leave them still untold. For, knowing %yliat those task would be, ihy hands might listless fall. And thou the moments fret away And leave unfinished all. But, thinking each to be the last, Thou'lt finish one by one. And calmly fold thy hands to rest, 81 80 85 90. 91. 92. And know "thy work is done. — L. C. Smith. 9;{. 94. Bert Davidson,— Music ! O how faint, how weak, Language fades before thy spell • Why shou J feelings ever speak, When thou can'st breathe her soul so well » J^riendship's balmy words may feign Love's are e'en more false than they : Oh ! tis only music's strain Can sweetly soothe and not betray. 10 I -Moore. in tl. but f 96. Happ And 88, les, knows, lu G. Whittier. do it with thy might ; JO, uor wisdom iu the —Bible. good life. —George Elliott. s, our souls to prove, ily of love, r each of us blows ; )ose the rose. —James Buckham. 11 vine not. -Joachiu Miller. best Id bo, — L. 0. Smith. o well ? 89. Louie Davidsou,— To live iu darkness— in de.spair to die l.s this indeed the boon to mortals given '■' Is there no port— no rock of refuge nigh ' There is-to those who fi.x their anchor hope iu heaven. Tiirn tlien O man ! and cast all else aside ; Direct thy wandering thoughts to thing.s above- TTi;"/.^f.T'? ^'""'y ^«^^»-i" "lat confide Till doubt be lost m faith, and bliss secured in love. T,v..^ vu ~^- ^- Colton. rred Ellis, — Rest not ! Life is sweeping by • Go and dare before you die. Something mighty and subjime Leave behind to conquer time (Tlorious 'tis to live for aye When these forms have passed away. —Goethe !)0. -Moore. Mrs. Myrtle M. Ellis,— ??Pw« ^I'f L'^^'T ^°'i '''^'°-'**' ^"^ descending sun Views, at thy hand, no worthy action done. 91. (ireta Ellis,— ^^"nf H^''*' ''°;'^'? ^"^ ^0"S and dreary. And the goal be out of sight, loot It bravely, strong or weary, Trust m God, and do the right. —Norman Macleod. !>a. Albert N. Ellis,— We have not wings, we cannot soar ; Rv I'l '^*\*^^^"^ f««t to .scale and climb The cloudy summits of our time. Tlie heights by great men reached and kept Were not attained by sudden flight; ^ But they, while tlieir companions .slep Were toiling upward in the night. ' -Longfellow 93. Geo. Edwards,— If God be for us, who can be against us ? _Bible. 94. Mrs. Geo. Edwards,— Wlio shall separate us from the love of Christ ? _Bible. »•')• Mrs. E. S. Edmondson,- —Johnson. 9«. Mrs M. E. Everson,— 11 ■^^mmmmmm ■ "^•-i- •r1 m hh ■I ,•■■ 4 f»7. J. W. Ellis.- Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time ; Footprints, that perhaps another, Sailing o'er life's solemn main, A forlorn and sliip wrecked brother. Seeing, shall take heart again. !tS. Mrs. J. W. Ellis,- Take time to be holy. Speak oft with thy Lord ; Abide in him always, And feed on His word ; Make friends of God's children, Help those who are weak, Forgetting in nothing His blessing to seek. w. 99. Hazel M. Ellis,— The Lord loveth a cheerful given. Pe kindly affectioued one to another. 100. Llewella D. Everson,— An idler is a watch that lacks; both hands As useless if it goes as if it stands. 101. Irelia G. Everson,— 102 108. ■3 ii —Longfellow. 10 D. Langstaff. —Bible. — Cowper. Teach me to feel another's woe. And hide the fault I see. That mercy I to others show That mercy show to me. — Pope. Miss Evelyn Ever.sou,— •A common-place life,' we say, and we sigh ; cut why should we .sigh as we say ? The common-place sun in the common-place skv Makes up the comnion-placa day. The nioou and the stars are commonplace things And the flower that bloams, and the bird that sings • iiut dark were the world and .sad our lot ' If the flowers failed, and the sun shone not ; And (Jod, who studies each separate soul, Out of common-place lives makes his beautiful whole. —Susan Coolidge. Mrs. Francis Ellis,— h« «)v.K,"'^ ff"''\^," "PT "''' ^o^*^' «»^ he shall sustain thee : he shall never sulfer the righteous to be moved. —Bible. 104. J. E. Edmondson,— Let not the sun gc down upon thy wrath. 105. Mrs. J. E. Edmondson,— Man, respect thyself. 12 —Bible. -Banner. lOJ ing nef 109 I 110. 111. 112. 113. 114. and c llfi. so to I "liiillll' .^ nmmmMmmm m^ - us me, :S me ; er, u, )ther. 1. 106. — Loiifirfellow. dreii, -W. D. Laiigstaff. — IBible. — Cowper. —Pope. 111. ather. bands, ivoe, iigli ; lace sky ce things, 1 that sings ; lot ; lutiful whole. — Su.san Coolidge. le shall sustain thee ; —Bible. rath. —Bible. -Banner. Annie H. Ellis,— C heart ! to still thy craving IS aught can'st thoa find on earth Where shadows darken sunshine And sorrows follow mirth Only when thou hast tasted Ihe love of Christ who died And trusted in Him fully Wilt thou be satisfied. —Jessie H. Barker. . 107. Ed. Edmondson,— t ^S'"'''''* *? ^^.''''^ ^y friendship's ch,.in, I XT °. ^^^^y ^^Jock receiving, I ?iT^lf ''^"^ ^^^''* t'le one can pain I Without the other grieving. s A chain that use wears not away But more enduring makes it ; ' A Cham so strong that none can say Ihat even death quite breaks it. _l. c. Smith 108. H. Foy,- ness grinds He all Patience he stands waiting, with exact- —Longfellow. 109. Miss Claire Farewell,— I hold it truth with him who sings ip one clear harp in diver's tones! Of M, '"^'f ""F V^^ °'' stepping stones Of their dead selves to higher filings. -Tennyson. 110. Caroline Edith Farewell,— Home, Home, sweet home. Be It ever so humble, There's no place like home. 111. A. R. Farewell.— —J. G. Whittier. 1 J 2. Mrs. Frances Farrow,— If God be for us who can be against us ? _Bible. llii. Jas A. Faulkner,— There's notl,ing either good or bad but thinking makes it so. 114. E. O. Felt,— —Shakespeare. andcatrifot^KEefSX"!;*'^*'"^ very dog —Roland Hill. 115. Ada M.Fife,— so to th'^m'*'"'"'*^ ''^ ^^--^^ '^-' ™-n should do to you do ye even 18 —Bible. 116. Miunie Fisher,— in8pira?k,V° '"^"^ "^' ^°* *" ^"^^^^^ "^« ought to be oar aim aud — J. R. Macduff. 117. F. L. Fowke,— The noblest motive is the public good. —Foster. 118. F. Fowke,— Vision.s are the creators and feeders of the world. „„ _ —George Elliot. 119. Dr. Ford,— sav ' ?T?i*^1i* h®«^l" "^^A ''^^ ^^^""^^ ^'P'" ^^° *o Beersheba, and say, Us all barren' ; and so it is ; and so is all the world to him who will not cultivate the fruits it offers. -Sterne. 120. Mrs. E. J. Francis,— To err is human, To forgive divine. —Pope. 131. Mrs. 0. French,— We have not wings, we cannot soar ; But we have feet to scale and climb By slow degrees, by more and more, The cloudy summits of our time. —Longfellow. 122. H. C. Fairbanks,— an^ ^.?f°7^^ ^"^ ?° anything that can be done in this world ■ w^?iin?,f ^^° • °° circumstances, no opportunities will make a man witnout It. -Goethe. 123. Mrs. J. O. Guy,— ,r.aH. ®*^^^ ^'^^ therefore in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and be not entangled again with the yoke of bond- ^®- —Gal. 5 chap., 1st verse. 124. J. O. Guy,— r^^l,no?"*'l™^u^?l^^^" supply all your need according to his riches m glory by Christ Jesus. -Philippiaus 4 chap. , 19 verse 125. E. J. Gregory,— Life is real ! Life is earnest ! And the grave is not its goal ; 'Dust thou art, to dust returnest,' Was not spoken of the soul. Not enjoyment, and not sorrow, Is our destined end or way ; But to act, that each to-morrow Find us farther than to-day. —Longfellow. 128 C I. Goodheart,- Choose well , your choice is brief and yet endless. —Goethe. 14 -iiiSHiaK£i 127. ght to be our aim and —J. R. Macduflf. 3 good. -Foster. f the world. —George Elliot. )an to Beersheba, and s all the world to him — Sterne. —Pope. ir; imb re, -Longfellow. done in this world : ties will make a man — Goethe. erewith Christ hath th the yoke of bond- chap., Ist verse. ed according to his ms 4 chap., 19 verse. it,' — Longfellow. Jndless. —Goethe. Eva Gihbs,— Ah 1 many a shaft at random sent tinds mark the archer little meant : And many a word at random spoken May soothe «.r wound a heart that's broken —Scott. 128 Mrs. Jas. D. Goodman,- -Bible. 129. J. P. Grierson. B.A.,— -P J- Bailey. 1-^. Flossie G rose — Flower in the crannied wall. I pluck you out of the crannies ; T Um/a" here, root and all, in my hanc^, Whif ^'^''•'-*>"t if I could understand What you are. root and all. and all in all I should know what God and man is '-Tennyson. 131. Mrs FredGuy,- ence o^thingi^Sol'seen. '"'*'"'""" °* *^'"«« ^^^P^^ for. the evid- —Bible. i;t2. Fred Guy,- In other men we faiilts can spy F«"l v'^T ^^^^ .'"°^« that dims he eye Each httle speck and blemish find ; ^ To our own stronger errors blind _Cxray. 133. S. P. Goodheart, — And this our life, exempt from public haunt Elizabeth Goyne,- -Shakespeare. -James Megranhan. Mrs. Gardineer, - ...e to Ue' «yHta,. He re.toreth my ,oM| .' hI S"}^ "" f^"^' 'h* ««ll «H .vitb L : Thy s^A^ tVbuS th'.r"s,.; VJ" "" ™°" -Bible. IB m. 13.5. ' Till I 136. 137. 138. 139. Edith Gurley,- There is nothing so kingly jis kindness And nothing so royal as truth. —Alice Cary Evelyn Guy Galley,— One tonch of Nature makes the whole world kin. VV. H. Gregory,— I say but what I think and nothing more or less. And when I pray, my heart is in my prayer; I cannot say one thing and mean another. - Longfellow. Norman J. Grose,— Breathes there a man, with soul so dead Who never to himself has said, 'Th's IS my own, my native land ?' Whose heart has ne'er within him huined, As home his footsteps he has turned From wandering on a foreign strand ? If such there be, go, mark him well For him no minstrel raptures swell. High though his title, proud his pelf. The wretch concentred all in self; Living,- shall forfeit fair renown. And, doubly dying, shall go down. To the vile dust from whence he sprung — Unwept, unhonored, and unsung. ' -Scott I 140. A. M. Germond,— How oft the sight of means to do deeds done. ill deeds makes ill —Shakespeare. 141. Mrs F. L. Henry. Be not like the stream that brawls Loud with shallow waterfalls. But in quiet selt-control Link together soul and soul. 142. Mrs. E. M. Henry. The quality of mercy is not strain'd ; It droppeth, as the gentle rain from heaven Upon the place beneath : it is twice bless'd ; It blesseth him that gives and him that takes : Tis mightiest in the mightiest ; it becomes The throne'd monarch better than his crown : His sceptre shows the force of temporal power. The attribute to awe and majesty. Wherein doth sit the dread and fear of kings ; But mercy is above this sceptred sway, It is enthron'd in the hearts of kings. It is an attribute to God himself ; And earthly power doth then shew likest God's When mercy seasons justice — Tne Merchant of Venice, Shakespeare. 16 14 sii 16 fei mm^ssmi indness —Alice Cary world kin. ;)ie or less. payer ; ler. - Longfellow. 143. F. L. Henry. In the world's broad field of battle, In the bivouac of Life, Be not like dumb, driven cattle 1 Be a hero in the strife. 144. Geo. VV. Hezzelwood. He doees well who does his best. -Elliot. ;o dead n burned, led ind? >11 II. elf, prung,— 145. Alyruer Hezzelwood. Make thou my vision sane and clear. That I may see what beauty clings In common forms, and find the soul Of unregarded things. -C. G. D. Roberts. 14(5. F. E. -Scott. 1 deeds makes ill —Shakespeare. iwls Hislop. All are architects of Fate, Working in these walls of time ; Some with massive deeds and great. Some with ornaments of rhyme. For the structure that we raise. Time is with material filled ; Our to-days and yesterdays Are the I/locks with which we build. Build today, then, strong and sure. With a firm and ample base ; And ascending and secure Shall to-morrow find its place. —Longfellow 147. n'd; heaven bless'd ; hat takes : iecoines is crown : jral power, of kings ; ikest God's nice, Shakespeare. Franklin Humphries,— Seek ye first the Kingdom of God, and His riehteousness and all these things shall he added unto you. ---MattVew 6, Ss! 148. Annie Hogarth, In the elder days of art. Builders wrought with greatest care liach minute and unseen part ; For the Gods see everywhere. Let us do our work as well. Both the unseen and the seen ; Make the house, where Gods may dwell Beautiful, entire, and clean. —Longfellow i 149. sires of thy heart. Mrs. Sabina Hunt,— .?"^^Li^.r^^ *" *^^ ^'^' ^^^ He shall give thee the de- — Bible. 150. Lillian M. Hall,— f««. . ,^^i"B8/one well and with a care exempt themselves from fear; things done without example in their issue are to be f eaJed! —Shakespeare. 17 "■■laasiassi ■.■».-J i^i 151. L. Hutchiugs, Jasper Hill, Jamica, W I _ Whatever thy hand flndeth to do, do it with thy might. —Bible 153. Whitfield Haiuer,- lo realize that journey to the moon ! ^tVJ''u?F^'' ** I'"® ^^'^t J^as not sprung Straight from the heart within. ^ — Rosland in 'Cyrano de Bergerao ' 153. Luther C. Hall,— The quality of mercy is not strain 'd ; tJ wLlof^Pl"''^ H^"^***^ ; i^ '« twice bless'd ; ?Ti« m1!S-^V'"- *^?* »*^^« and him that takes The Z^oSl'" t'^^'nightiest. It becomes 1 he throned monarch better than his crown ; —Shakespeare. 154 W. A. Halnan,- Life is more than what man fancies, Not a game of idle chances. But It steadilv advances Up the rugged heights of time, lUl each complex world of trouble ^very sad hope's broken bubble, Hath a meaning most sublime. -Right Living. 155. Mrs. W. A. Hainan,— —James Russell Lowell. 156. M. Ada Hansen,— ^' —Longfellow. 157. M. Marie Hansen,— And the night shall be filled with music au ii^i*®, ''ares that infest the dav, bhall fold their tents like the Arabs f: u of 16 -v^.v „.4cii LCUts IlKB I And as silently steal away. —Longfellow. 16! W. A. Hare,— 158. yeteaihtuevesTs^Stli"""*^ ^ our watches-none go just alike, —Pope. 159. H. J. Harris,— AnH^Lw fu°**!,^^^*I '^i'" *° themselves are true, And what they dare to dream of, dare to do. -Lowell. IS 17( ^•mttumm^iiZi : with thy might. —Bible u or fame ! ing Dyraiio de Bergerac leaven )less'd ; lat takes, ecomes I crowu ; — Shakespeare. !ies, —Right Living. lu the throne, I the dim unknown, tch above His own. Russell Lowell. hat we think, and I the sacred profes- — Longfellow. nusic —Longfellow. uone go just alike, —Pope. are true, do. —Lowell. 160. J. E. Harvey,— Let us, then, be up and doing, With a heart for any fate ; Still achieving, still pursuing. Learn to labor and to wait. 161. J.Harvey,— Godliness is profitable unto all things, having promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come. St. Paul. J 62. G. W. Harvey,— Speak gently ; 'tis a little thing Dropped in the heart's deep well ; The good, the joy, which it may bring Eternity shall tell. —Bates. 163. L. J. Harvey,— friPnrtAi^'^^.^tf'* 'I never lost; he who sows courtesy reaps triend.ship ; and he who plants kindness gathers love. -Basil. 164. Thos. Hezzelwood, Winnipeg, Man., The loveliest thing on earth is a beautiful pure good woman. 105. E. Hezzelwood, Winnipeg, Man.,— Blest be love, to whom we owe All that's fair and bright below. —Moore. 166. W. A. Heron, Scarboro, Ont.,— A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver —Bible, 167. Mrs. W. A. Heron,- of host^°* ^^ "''^^*' "'''■ ^^ P"'"'^''' ^"^ ^y ™y '^Pi"*' s'*"^ the Lord —Bible. 168 Mrs. Almira Hezzelwood,— A few more years shall roll, A sew more seasons come, And we shall be with those that rest Asleep within the tomb. 169. Milford Hezzelwood, Iowa Falls, Iowa,— No matter what you try to do At home or at your school. Always do your very best. There is no better rule. 170. Velma Hezzelwood,— Truth is honest, truth is sure. Truth is strong, and must endure. 18 171. M 178. Prof U>r9n Hezzelwood. Iowa Fall, Iowa - Somowlur. withiu the treasure-house of God Walk to and fro. as o'er the earth they rod Our lost ideals, radiant, divine ^ ' ' "^J^Zt^J^lVir ^''^ ^^^'^' '^"d tears T =fi .u u ^*^'" **'® vacant world oi time • I see hem bending low amidst the yeare ' To hear increase of music in earth's chime. ^ ^ruZ "''.*"*'■*' ^I'^'y l^"Khter, dearer there Tlian when we loved them first in hannv davs Wheu nioru ug ran to evening with oSare ^ ' And o'er the earth breathed sprlng'tK^roundelavsy George Wellington Hezzelwood, Iowa Falls, lowa.- I love the name of Washington I love my Country too, ^V-O^'e the Flag, the dear old Flag. Of rod, and white, and blue. 173. Wm. E. Hezzelwood,— 'Tis easy enough to be pi aeaut. When everything goes like a song ; liut the man worth while Is tlie man with a smile. When everything goes dead wrong. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. 174. Zolma Hezzelwood,— Whene'er a du(y waits for thee, With some judgment view it, And never idly wish it done • Begin at once and do it 175. Mrs. Jennie Hezzelwood, Iowa Falls, Iowa - —Simons. 176. Oliver Hezzelwood,— No man can judge anotl>f> 's dn Godonly sees without a' ■ iij Fm many are crowned as sain'r i by God Whose graves unheedi,i>' fe:,t hav- trod • Man judges by the out^r htu, God by the inner strife . -Frederick George Scott. 177. Mrs. O. Hezzelwood.— plaining of thy lot neiprul, and above all uncom- fi u. Lny iot. —Annie Robertson Brown. ao sa 1^ th la J8 18 it 18' Kii me tic 18c I8t au( 187 act va,— f God. try Hhiue, trod, tears inie ; s lime. lere )py days, care, e's roundelays y ills, Iowa,— J. iaff. t, Ollg. la Wheeler Wilcox. ee. 3 which we occupy, Shem. — Simons. Tod rod; Tick George Scott. duty, be the skies Thou art happy thee this day, this I above all uncom- Brtsou Brown. 178. Pliee Hezzelwood, If (4od soud thee a cro.-s, fak^ it up willingly and follow Him I .>« law of the Lord and i Z law doth he meditate day and night. ist Psalm 182. 183. Mrs. J. S. Harvey,— It 's not so much what you say. As the manner in which you say it. Mrs. J. Hill,— It is ignorance, 'Uid not knowledge that rejects in.struction • It IS weakness, and not strength that refuses co-operation ' — Selected. 184. Olive N. Hill,— Life has such Iiard conditions that every dear and precious gift, everv rare virtue, every pleasant facultv, everrgenial end ?w ment,--love hope, joy, wit, sprightliness, be. e^oleLf iiust some times be put into the crucible to distil the one elixfr-pSce 185. Gertrude M. Hill,— Per Aspera ad Alta. (Through difficulties to the heights ) 186. R. McK. Inghs,— ■uKl wm^'finH fi!n ?''^ to present duty breaks a thread in the loom and will find thf. flaw, when he may have forgotten the cause. — Beecher. 187. Mrs. R. McK. luglis.— action to anftendf; ""'"'"* "'"' ^"° ^*" ^^^' ^'"'^r^^ « good •' ■ — Lavater. 21 %?^:A^ wiiii ■ i- i . « ..> i« ''iPilili- 188. Mrs. R. H. James,- ^ tJ ,Wliat would the world be to us, It the children were no more? We should dread the desert behind us Worse than the dark before —Loup fellow. 189. G. Joblin, Ca^sarea,— Full many a gem of purest ray r«irene IhP dark unfathoiued caves of ocean bear ; i^ull many a flower is born to blush unseen And waste its frasrance on the desert air — Gray. 190. Frank Joblin, Ca^sarea,— Thnn^.L" ^'■"f ''T" ^"^ ^P^^I^^ "ot. 'merits more Than they who clamor loudest at the door. -Longfellow. 1 91 . Miss Joblin, Caisarea,— ^'irf'niiT" ^^^"^ *'■""? (enough for man to know) Virtue alone is happiness below.' ^^u^w; — Pope. 192. John Joblin,— ^'"wSnttclS^^r" '*« «-" ^-^^*"d-. after its own life Set on thy sigliing lips, shall make thee slad • A poor man, served by thee, shall make See ricl, • Thnf '^ r u",^"^^^'^ '^y "»<^«- «hall made thee sSa • "^'"reSest ''''''' "^^^^"' ^^ «-^ -Se^ Sr^ice, which thou — E. B. Browning. 5JC 20 193. 194. 195. Mrs. John Joblin,— He who hath made thee whole Will heal thee day by day • He who hath spoken to thy soul Hath many things to say. He who hath gently taught Yet more will make thee know ; He who so wondrously hath wrought Yet greater things will show. He loveth always, faileth never • So rest on him to-day forever \ -P. R. Havergal. F. G. Joblin,— But O thou bounteous Giver of all good Sr "'^.* ?^.f " '^''y ^'^^^ T^y^^lf t^« crown I ? .H Juw,"'''"^'''*',^"''""^ *l'e«'we are poor. And with thee rich, tako what thou wilt away! -Cowper. Bert Joblin,— An ounce of action is worth a ton of talk. 205 2o;{ ao4. —Old Proverb. J i to US, liud us —Loup fellow. le itiu boar ; uuseeu sert air. — Gray. 3rit8 more, oor. — Longfellow. an to know) —Pope. s, after its own life service, which thou '. H. Browning. ght — F. R. Havergal. wn 1 ire poor, may. —Cowper. —Old Proverb. m. C H. Jacobs,- Au error gracefully acknowledged, is a victory won. — Gascoigre. 197. P. W. Jacobs,— Oh many a shaft at random sent ^inds mark the archer little meant ; And many a word at random spoken May soothe or wound a heart that's broken. —Sir W. Scott. 198. Mrs. A. Jacobi,— simple'^tiuth.'' "°''""^ '' '''•""'^ "'^ ''''' ^" ^ any emergency of life as —Dickens. 199. Thomas P. Johns,— Hope, unyielding to despair. Springs forever fresh and fair ; Earth's serenest prospects fly, Hope's enchantments never die —Montgomery. 5200. L. Newton Johns,— Not in the clamor of the crowded street, Not in the shouts and plaudits of the throng But m ourselves, are triumph and defeat. -Longfellow. 201 Ralph H. Johns,— Not enjoyment and not sorrow, Is our destined end or way ; But to act, that each to-morrow Find us farther than to-day. -Longfellow. 202. Mrs. W. Jackson,- A higher love and a wiser, I Bids the summer come and go In the daily round of duty Lose sight of the present pain w^. H a^''^*'' ''?i^'" ^"^ 'hopeful heart. For the Spring that shall come again. 20». Norman Jennings,— Patience is a virtue. 204. Mrs. Anne Jones,— When this you see. remember me And bear me in your mind ; Let Jill the world say what they will Speak by me, as you find. 98 — Fidelis. — bulucted. ■H 205. C. Joues,— f v,„f , Ho— every one that thirsteth. come ye to the waters and hf> 206. C. A. Jones,- A little work, a little play To keep us going— au.I r,u, good-day ! A little warmth, a little light Of love's bestowing— and so, good-night ! A little fun, to match the sorrow Of each day's growing— and so, good-morrow ! A little trust that when we die We reap our sowing ! and so— good-bye ! —George Du Maurier. 207. Effle H. Jennings,— Ioving1aforthrsnv^^*Sl'" '^ ^'""" than gre.^ ^ohes and 808. Mrs. J. B. Keddie,— If any little word of mine May make a life the brighter. If any little song of mine May make a heart the lighter, God help me speak the little word. And take my bit of singing. And drop it in some lonely vale To set the echoes ringing. — Auou. 209. J. B. Keddie,— thine owruideStaSg."'*' ^" *'"'^ '"^''^ = ""'^ lean not unto paths '" """ ^^^ '''''^' acknowledge Him, and He shall direct thy —Bible. 210. Arthur J. L, Keddie, Bear Lake, Mich ,— of M,..?"'^ *''^ ^"''^^" ^"^^ °^ ^•'™* ^»" l'"»S the Golden Age °^ ^**"- -Frances E. Willard. 211. Helen M. Keddie.— For life seems so little when life is past. And the memories of sorrows fleet so fast ; And the woes wliich were bitter to you and to me Shall vanish as rain-drops that full in the sea, And all that has hurt us shall be made good, ' And the puzzles which hindered be understood. And the long, hard, hard march throngli the wilderness bare Seem but a day's journey when we are there. —Selected to the waters, and he yea, come, buy M'ine —Bible. 2V>. Mrs. A. J. L. Keddie.— Thou mu.st be true to thyself, If thou the truth would 'st teach, Thy soul must overflow, If thou another's soul would'st reach. It takes the overflow of heart To give the lips full speech. ight ! l-morrow ! bye ! George Du Maurier. han great fVhes and - j-ible. m A, -Anou. ; nnd lean not unto He shall direct thy —Bible. [ig the Golden Age Frances E. Willard. ai;!. Master James Luke Keddie,— ^ Kind hearts are the gardens, [ Kind thoughts are the roots, I Kind words are the blossoms, ; Kind deeds are the fruits. a 14. May D. Keddie,— On the river of life, as I float along, ^ I see, with the spirit's sight, Tliat many a nauseous weed of wrong Has root in a seed of right For evil is good that has gone astray. And sorrow is only blindness. And the world is always under the swav Of a chaugeie.ss law of kindness. - Ella Wheeler Wilcox. 210. WillG. Keddie,- dial ^^ ^'^'* '" '''''"^'' "°* ^^'-'''^ ' "' thoughts, not in figures on a thinks^S7^^sXi^is.^;jt^SiSr- "^--^!!s^ 21 (i. .Jean V. Keddie,— He whom temptation never has assailed Knows not that subtle sense of moral strength ■ When sorely tried, we waver, but at length ' Kise up and turn away, not having failed. —Ella Wheeler Wilcox. 217. E. Louise Keddie,— Be sure, no earnest work Of any honest creature, howbeit weak. Imperfect, ill-adapted, fails so much • It IS not gathered as a grain of sand io enlarge the sum of human action u.sed I'or carrying out v^od's end. —Elizabeth Barret Browning. to me a, lod, • wilderness bare, ;■ —Selected. 318. Mrs. A. D. Kennedy,— When I shall meet with those that I have loved t.lasp in my arms tlie (h-ar ones long removed * I shl/r fn^.''f"\Thoa to me l.tst piwed,' Ishall be satisfied. -Horatius Bonar. ■•■M Mrika ■MW ~^ ■■■i ••ili>. Mrs. H. King,— ^^^hVurf""^^! What seems so is transitiou : ims life of mortal breath ^ '?H^ a suburb of the life Elysian, — Lougf allow —Gray. — Cowper. Whose portal we call death. 220. Harry King,— To each his sulfenngs : all are men Condemu'd alike to ^roau ; The tender for another's pain, Ih unfeeling for his own. Yet, ah ! Why should they know their fate, ^i^^e^sorrow never comes too late. And happmess too swiftly flies? Thought would destroy their paradise JVo more ;— where ignorance is bliss, lis folly to be wise. ^21. Mr. R. Kinver,— Beware of too sublime a sense Of your own worth and consequence 222 Mis. R. Kinver,— Every radiant winged to-morrow, hidden in the distant years W^J^ ,P°''^ °^ ^% "^ '°^^«^^' 1^"« if« freight of hopes and fears • Every hour upon the dial, every sand-grain dropped b? Time ' Quickens man by useful trial for his mtrch to Eublfme — Chas. Sangster. 22ii. Annie M. Kinver,— Ships that pas.s in the night, and speak each other in passintr Only a signal shown and a distant voice in the darknS OnlvVf' r'"^ ""^ "^? '^'^P"^« '-^"^ «Pe^k one anoTher ' Only a look and a voice, then darkness again and a silence. 334. Maggie M. Kinver,— Life is all too short, dear, And sorrow is all too great ; To suffer onr slow compassion That tarries until too late ; And it's not the thing you do, dear. It s the thing you leave undone, ihat gives you a bit of a heartache At the setting of the sun. 33.-). Jug. m. Keith,— What I My young lady and Mistress ! vour Ladyshiu is ne-ir er to heaven than when I saw you last. Pray, lie^ven yoVr vSee" hke a piece of uucurreut gold, be not cracked within the ring —Hamlet, Shakespeare. 3(5 SI 33 33( !;i] 3;i2 •2:VA. "wmm^ raiisitiou : — Lougfellow, fate, lice —Gray. — Cowper. ■2-2(> Letitia D. Keegan,— linild thee iiKiro. stately mansions, O my soul, As tlie swift seasons roll ! Leave the low- vaulted past ! Let each new temple, nobler than the last, Shut thee *rom lieaven with a dome more vast, Till thou at length art free, Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's unresting sea ! —The Chambered Nautilus, Oliver Wendell Holmrs. 227. Henry King, — Full many a gem of purest ray serene The dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear ; Full many a flower is born to blush unseen. And waste its sweetness on the desert air. 228. Little Rex Kitts, Foxhome, Minn.,— The Lord is my Keeper. the distant years, of hopes and fears ; dropped by Time o the sublime. — Chas. Sana;ster. li other in passing, the darkness ; ne another iu and a silence. 2;io. —Gray -Bible. lear, ine, che ir Ladyship is near- heaven, your voice, ithin the ring, inlet, Shakespeare. 229. Mrs. Alex. Kitts, Foxhome, Minn.,— Small service is true service while it lasts Of humblest friends bright creatures scarce not one Ihe daisy by the shadow that it casts Protects the lingering dew drop from the sun. — Wordsworth. Alex Kitts, Foxhome, Minn.,— We get back our mite as we measure. We cannot do wrong and feel right. We cannot give pain and get pleasure, i or justice avenges each slight. -Alice Carey. 2:51. Dr. T. E. Kai,ser,— For forms of government let fools contest ; Whate er is best administered is best • For modes of faith let graceless zealots fight : His can t be wrong whose life is in the right. -Pope. '^•i'i. L. Lister Kaiser, — Shield of my love 'lean hard'. And let me feel the pressure of thy care. I know tliy burden, child ; I shaped it. Poised It in mine own hand, made no proportion In Its weight to thine unaided strength • For even as I laid it on, I said, ' I shall be near, and while she leans on me 1 his burden shall be mine, not hers. -Paul Pastinor. -':«. Lyman C:. Laiuhland,— ,. , , That which we are, we ai-e ; One e(| uaiteiuper of heioie hearts, Made weak by time and fate, i.ut strong in will To strive, to seek, to Hnd, and not to yield. Tennyson. 27 MtfMM 234. C. Gartshore Keddie,— Boys flying kites haul in their white winged birds You can't do that way when you're flying words ; ' ihe things we think, majr sometimes fall lack dead, But God Himself can't kill them when they're said. —Will Carletou. 2;-{5. Norman Lauchland,— O' Wad some power the giftie gie us. To see oursel's as ithers see us. -Burns. 236. AdaLuxon,— Strength for today is all that we need As there never will be a to-morrow ; ^oy'^^o.y^onwy will prove but another today With Its measure of joy or sorrow. —Selected 237. R, Lancaster, England,— What we have, we'll hold. - Chamberlain. 238. J. N. LeRoy,- Four things come not back-the spoken word, the sned arrow, the pastTife and the neglected opportunity. ^ — Johnson —Dickens. 239. Mrs. J. N. LeRoy,— Let us give everything its due. 240 Mrs. D. Lick,- Lives of great men all remind us We can make our lives sublime, And, departing, leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time ; Footprints, that perhaps anothc^r. Sailing o'er life s solemn main, A forloin and shipwrecked biothei, Seeing, shall take heart again. —Longfellow. 241. Eliza Z. M Lick,- fi, f 1^" f'^^ the meanest flower that blows, can give thoughts that do often he too deep for tears. -VVordswoi th 242. Mrs. Mary Luke,— Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God. ^*'"'weci —I John, 3, 1. 243. Mary E. Luke,- Por things far off we toil, while many a good, Not sought because too near, is never gained. — Wordsworth 28 XBXMaboiMWI winged birds, [lying words ; i fall lack dead, an they're said. —Will Carletou. gie us, —Rums, 244. Addie T. Luke,— All's for the best ! be sanguine and cheerful, Trouble and sorrow are friends in disguise ; Nothing but folly goes faithless and fearful, Courage for ever is happy and wise. — Tupper. 245. Kate M. Luke. - Let every minute, as it springs, Convey fresh knowledge on its wings ; Let every minute, as it flies. Record thee good, as well as wise. —Cotton. e need ow ; other today «'. —Selected. Chamberlain. ken word, the sped tunity. — Johnson. —Dickens. 1 us lime, us time ; ther, lin, other, in. — Longfellow. 3, can give thoughts — Wordsworth. bher hath bestowed God. — I John, 3, 1. ly a good, 3r gained. — Wordsworth 248 J Herbert R. Luke,- _ More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of. Wherefore, let thy voice Rise like a fountain for me night and day. For v/hat are men better than sheep or goats That nourish a blind life within the brain, If, knowing God. they lift not hands of prayer Roth for themselve.s and those who call them friend • hor so the whole round earth is every way Round by gold chains about the feet of God, -Tennyson. 247. Emily G. Luke,- There are who ask not if thine eye Re on them ; who, in love and truth. Where no misgiving is, rely Upon the genial sense of youth ; Glad hearts 1 without reproach or blot ; Who do thy work, and know it noL : Long ma'/ the kindly impulse last! Hut thou, if they should totter, teach them to stand fast. — Wordsworth's Ode to Duty. 248. Samuel Luke,— .n„«'o^^'"'''^i ,"".** ""^'^'' **'■** ^"<^ <^he breath of kings, 'An honest man s the noblest work of God.' — Rurns 249. R. A. J. Little,- flood Sd?nn fn f iff *" ^^1 ''i^''"'^ "f "'^"' ^^hich taken at the nooa, leans on to fortune or to fame. -Shakespeare. A'lO. Mrs H. H. Lang.- So live, that when thy summons counts to ioin ihe innumerable caravan that moves JLo the pale realms of shade, where each shall take His chamber in the silent halls of death, Ihou go not like the quarry-slave at night, hcourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed iiy an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave Like one who u-raps the drapery ot his couch About him. and lies down to plea.sant dreams. -Bryant. 30 UMM 261. €. E. L. 252. H. Law,— Life IS real, life is earnest, And the grave is not its goal ; Dust thou art, to dust rrfturnest, Was not spoken of the soul. -Longfellow H. H. Lmg,- Ring out false pi ide in place and hlood. ihe CIVIC slander and the spite ; Ring in the love of truth and right, Ring in the common love of good. —Tennyson. Evelyn Lang,— The Rock-a-bye lady from Hush-a-by street Conies stealing, comes creeping ; The poppies, they hang from her head to her feet And each has a dream that is tiny and fleet. Aiid she bringeth her poppies to you, mv sweet, When she findeth you sleeping. -Eugene Fi(.d 254. Mrs. Catnarine Luke,— ,hl^"u '""''^ ^''u^ **''" '" perfect peace, whose mind is staved fffJi^";:l^"T,'?.^^'''V«t^»^^l'Pthee. Trust ye in the LordTr 253. on ever, for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength — Lsaiah26, 3 and 4. 255. Mrs. Joseph Luke,— Not hy works of righteousness which we have done hut according to his mercy he saved us. by the washing of regene a tion, and renewing of the Holy Ghost. -Titus 1^5 256. Joseph Luke,— Fear thou not ; for I am with thee : be not dismayed • for I am thy God; I will strengthen thee; yea, I wl" Kthee- yea. I will uphold thee with tSe right hand of my vi^hSisu^k —Isaiah 41, 10. 357. Mrs. G. Lauder, El Paso, Texas,— True worth is in being, not seeming— In doing each day that goes by, Some little good— not in dreaming Of great things to do bye-and-bye ; For, whatever men say in bliuduess, And m spite of the fancies of youth, There's uothing so kingly as kindness. And nothing so royal as truth. -Alice Carey. 258. E. H. Lick,- Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore, So do our minntes hnsteu to their end. % 2i 2t Wi 30 ,'Wi-' iiiWinilli dfih lest, il- —Longfellow. l)lo<)d, ht, A. -Tennyson. by street ead to her feet and fleet, >u, my sweet, —Eugene Fu id hose mind is stayed ye in the Lord for- itrength. — Isaiah 26, 3 and 4. 1 we have done, hut ishing of regenera- — Titus 3, 5. } not dismayed ; for a, I will help thee ; : my righteousness. —Isaiah 41, 10. s— 250. Mrs. Edgar Luke.— I count this thing t wise man causes ns our aflfectiou. — Haliburtou. ud, breath, f death, iroud — — Anonymous. all fall -Selected. 375. Mabel Morrow, — Set yourself down for nothing, and if auv person takes you for something, it will be all clear gain. " — Auonyiuou.s. 27(i. Mrs. .Jane P. May,— Hitherto hath the Lord helped us. —Bible. 377. Maude MacMillan The worldly hope meu set their hearts upo i Turns ashes— or it prospers ! and anon, Like snow upou the desert's dusty face, Ligliting a little hour or two— was gone. —Omar Khayyam. 378. E. A Mallory,— Christ is our teacher instructing us in the way of salvation. — Moody. 379. Mrs. E. A. Mallory,— Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord. —Bible 380. R Mayiiard, Toronto,— It is in our o\yn thoughts and actions that we first have to St nd up for the riglit. our busine.ss is not to protect ourselves from our neighbors wrong, 1iut our neighbor from our wrong. —George McDonald 281. Diiisv McBrien,— Then, pilgrim, turn, thy cares forego; All earth born cares are wrong ; Man wants but little here below. Nor wants tliat little long. —Goldsmith. 383 M. A. McClelland,— Tongue cannot de.scribe the love of Christ : finite minds can- no conceive of it ; and those who know most of it can only say with inspiration, that it passeth knowledge — Paysou 383. Nellie McGregor,— "What you keep by you, you can change and mend but words once spoken can never be recalled. • ' - Roscominon 384. E. Mundy,— What lack of Paradise If, in Angelic wise. Each unto each, as to himself, were dear? If we in souls described. Whatever form might hide. Own brother, and own sister, everywhere? —Sir Edwin Arnold. 33 m—Knl —Longfellow &! 285. Nellie McKeuzie,— And the niglit shall be filled with music And the (\ires that infest the day, Shall fold their tents like the Arabs. And as silently steal away. 880. A. R, McLean. - Of all the niinieron« iil« that hurt our peace That press the soul, or wring the luind with anguish, lieyond comparison the worst are those By our own folly, or our guilt brought on. —Burns. 287. Mrs. A. R. McLean,— a..^ ,f ^u^i^V^ ^* ^^^"'^} ^^ f^^^^" y"" = ^^^^' a"fl ye shall find ; knock and It shall be opened unto you. —Bible. 288. Mrs. Miller, I of W, England,— Just to let thy Fath'^r do What he will ; Just to know that He is true. And be still. Just to follow hour by hour As he leadeth ; Just to draw the moment's power As it needeth. Just to trust Him, this is all. Then the day will surely be Peaceful whatsoe'er befall. Bright and bless'd calm and free. 2£ th es 29 go 29i F. R. Havergal. 389. W Miller, I of W. England.- Courage, brother ! do not stumble ; Though thy path be dark as night ; There's a star to guide the humble ; Trust in God, and do the right. 296 ---Norman MoLeod. 290.— Effie M. Mitchell, Enniskillen,— Oh ! wad some power the giftie gie To see oursel's as ithers see us. 297 us Burns. 291. J. C. Mitchell, M. D. Enniskillen.— Be in earnest ; What thou doest, What thou planuest and pursnest 1 Plan pursue and do with spirit ; Never care though thou inherit Power weaker than another's Glory dimmer than thy brothers ; Use thy power, use it rightly Whereso'er thypower Thou turnest. Be in earnest : 298. 299. — Anon. 84 ^^marn^ 81C, -LoBgfellow 202, A. McMilian.- The span of life's nae lung euough N or deep enough tlie sea Na brode enough this weary world To part my love frae nie. peace :1 with anguish, ie t on. —Burns. re shall And ; knock —Bible. P. R. Havergal. Norman McLeod. 293. R. L. K. Munro,- There was a man in the land of Uz, whose name was Job ; and that man was perfect and upright, aud one that feared God, and eschewed evil. -Bible. 294. Mrs R. L. Munro,— Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven. -Bible. 295. L. K. Murton,— Manhood. With child-faith dead, and youth dreams gone like mist • We stand at noon beneath the blazing sun Upon life's dusty road, our course half done Ao more we stray through woods were birds hold tryst Ivor over mountains which the dawn hath kissed • In glare and heat the race must now be run On this blank plain, while round us one by one Our friends drop out and urge us to desist. Then from the brazen sky rings out a voice, Faint not, strong souls, quit you like men, rejoice ihat now like men ye bear the stre.ss and strains With eyes unbound seeing life's naked truth Gird up your loins, press on with might and main. And tasre a richer wine than that of youth. —Frederick George Scott 296. M. E. May,— The Lord is my shepherd ; I shall not want. —Bible. Burns. 297. John May, — Rock of Ages ! cleft for me Let me hide myself in thee ; Be of sin the double cure, Save me from its guilt and power. -Dr. Thomas Hastings 298. Rosalind May,— Judge not, that ye be not judged. -Bible — Anon. 299. Edythe May,— Into each life some rain must fall, Somedays must be dark aud dreary. -Longfellow ,.#• »&m^ iMMMtlta ^SflNn Si!! 300. Albert McLaughlin,— let every man be occupied, and occupied iu the highest employment of which his nature is capable, and die with the consciousness that he has done his best. —Sydney Smith 801. Mrs. S. McLaughlin — Thy way. not mine O Lord, However dark it be ! Lead me by tliiuo own hand Choose out the path for me, Smooth let it be or rough. It will be still the best, VVinding or straight it leads Right onward to thy rest. 302. J^J. McDonald,— Time's the king of men ; — T. L. Hately He's both their parent, and he is their grave, ^ And gives them what he will, not what they crave. — Pericles. 803. Jean Newsom, Toronto,— In the matter of doing good, obligation ceases onlv when power fails l. Pasteur. 304 J. A. Newsom, Toronto,- Happiness is a great love and much serving. -Ralf Iron. 305. Irene Odell. Buflfalo,— 'Tis well to think well it is divine to act well. — Horace Mann. 306. Chas. W. Owens,— For of all sad words of tongue or pen The saddest are these, 'It might have been.' —John Greenleaf Whittier. 307. Mrs. E H. Owens,— To one alone my thoughts arise, The Eternal Truth— the Good and Wise,— To Him I cry. Who shared on earth our common lot, But the world cor. .prehended not His diety. This world is but the rugged road Which leads us to tlie bright abode Of peace above. So let us choose that narrow way Which loads no traveller's foot astray Frou realms of love. — Longfellow. 86 ^' ipied iu the highest , and die with the — Syduey Smith :i08. Mrs C. B. Pike — O satisfy us early with thy msrcy ; that we may rejoice and be glad all our days. 809. Mrs. G. H. Pedlar,— Defer not till to-morrow to be wise, To-morrow's sun to thee may never rise. — Young. — T. L. Hately ar grave, hat they crave. — Pericles. ti ceases only when L. Pasteur. ing. -Ralf Iron. o act well. — Horace Mann. an ve been.' Greenleaf Whittier. Wise, — lot. ;nO. Alfred Wm. Parte,— Drink nothing without seeing it ; .sign nothing without read- ing it ; and then see that it means no more than it says. 311. James W. Provau, — Essential freedom is the right to differ, and that right must be sacredly respected. Nor must the privilege of dissent be con- ceded with coldness and disdain, but openly, cordially, and with good will. No loss of rank, abatement of character, or ostracism from society must darken the pathway of the humblest seeker after truth. The right of free thought, free enquiry, and free speech to all men everywhere is as dear as the noon-day and bounteous as the air and the sea. —John Clark Ridpath, LL.D. 312. Grace Phillips,— Religion is the best armor in the world, but the worst cloak. — Newton. 313. Mrs. Wm. Philip,— Commit thy way unto the Lord and he shall direct thy path Bible. 314. Mrs. Jas. Provan, — Shall I be left forgotten in the dust, When fate relenting, lets the flower revive ; Shall nature's voice, to man alone unjust. Bid him, though doomed to perish hope to live? Is it for this fair virtue oft must strive With dis.ippointmeut, penary, and pain? No ! Heaven's immortal spring shall yet arrive ; And man's majestic beauty bloom again. Bright through th' eternal year of love's eternal reign — Minstrel. 315. Sarah Phillips,— O Friend.ship! Of all things mns-t rare, and because most rare, most excellent, whose comforts in misery are alwavs sweet • whose counsels in prosperity are ever fortunate ! ay — TiOngf ollow . 31(5. Wm. Philip,— rhy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path. -Bible. 87 *jfc'* MMWNM iMiM V a Im.. us a 18. 317. Emma Phillips, — ,J} H '^