,.,..w.mnmu-rug` UIICTEHOIUOHI. The yuarly mlu amount to am .8ll). lnnunmuo amed Hugs and hum building: at. low man 0 I . lane:-nud 11. "em um THOIJAL` IFRIHGS. Auonl rm: mu msumon uuf. HARTFORD OONN. -I IAIIIIIIIIIL : -; n__n. IIAIIIEUIIU UUAVLV. Cllh Otp|lAl..- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I I.(Il|.Ul).0. Total Ana luxury m. 1882.... a.m.rr1w Lona paid nmyou-I ..... .. .|l'l|.lll).m Thu lendlnn lflro lmurnnor ("'o'mnI.ny on tho gmp1_n_I _A_s_sumun umm. CAPITAL - - $1,500.00). THE GLASGOW AND" l.0Nl)0N INSUR- A.\'t`l: t`t).\Il'ANY trnnsncts the stc_2ot~'n ltu1n-stbusinuss of all Brttish (`Ompanlus In (`atmdmtiopusit nnuslly with the (`mmdinn Govt-rnnmnt Jlwof assets for every M010! lia- bility nst-slculated by the Uuvm-ntuent. t .u's .\t t. tnseucs IIQl'l1'Al!L\' ANDI-ut).\n'rt.\' without t-...vt~ugths usual sixty dnys.res\Iltln|( in the t.u:u.;.u:y nevur but once having at and of any one your outsuuxdtng losses exceoding 85101`. W. G HRUVVN. STEWART HROWNE. Chief Inspector, Manager for Canada. Toronto. Montrom I III vvvrvrvnn .VIm_.. A._....> cmzew INSURANCTE co. INCORPORATED 1884. Capital Subscribed, - - $1,009,800 00 Government Doposit, - - 122,000 00 Losses Ptid. - - - - 3,000,000 00 LIvEn60L mo LONDON nub GLOBE` :13!` INSIIIEANCI COIPLNY. addition to wine! uhueholdeng. Amount Ii. . au.m.sao. Insurance otlaotod on Fnrm and City Pro- perty at the lawns! pouiblo raves. Three you pollcloc Issued on rinto dwol Mugs and farm building: at. w mu: 0! In-nmluln, lnnnnnnul nrnmnllv. up ind have -lornlotlo "In I " Iadtobo |hobtlnthoInnrkel' . Annn wind. R. ONIOOXIRY. breaking. School baths a lull lino. Scnunnn books. Ill) pages. 311. 2(1) pages. 5c. With euci book we. give an oil chrumo. Copy books. all numbers. 7c.;` 36 sheets of notcfmapor. l'c. En- velopes. 2": for 30.; 1! sheets foo I-wag. 5c.: two Ine codar lead pencils fm lc.: rub er tip id lead pencils. 4 for 51-.: the bust load penci in lie world. usuailv sold at ac. and I00. each, will be sold this week at 3c.. Automatic pencils. 50.: Penn. ink. Mucilure Glue. Time Books. 10 `quart galvanized Pull. worth 330.. Extra large galvanized ll auart l`ail. 25c.. worth We can enumerate but very few of the bar- ns we willomsr this week, but come and sec at ourselves and you will nd our oownlors louzlud with hummus. We are ed to up- ly the trade with special job lng [)l`l(`US oods` Fair and 7c. bllor. corner Princoas and Wellington Streets. Kingston, Ont. Gl.ASGOW AAND LONDON FIRE INSURANCE CO. invitation cards. with envvlupes to mruvh. fur 8c.; pape'rics. vonminim: :21 sheets, best. while :1 lepuper and olivclopus to mulch. llc.: best ream. Me. A I accwunt book. 30 . Elastic web, fresh pr 3. cinema-at rricua. Warner's stocking aupporwrs bent mm ity. 70. per pair: (nth patent. cutflmfdurs. Hc. per lil. \ new ilnporuuion of combs, uv. r m di crent styles. See our unbreakable comb ul He. is rem bar- uin. gunranto d to saw rordw without king. School bOx ks full line. Scribblinfz hooks. III) names. an. mun-s. one x 32.49. worth 84. Now in your timu In secure ll banmln. l.~unp rhilnm-ya, best uualitice. um dlum nntl.:-mmll 4:` : large size. 50.: lump burn- ers luuditun and small. `It: : large 3 7.9. 101'. l.nn~ tern ulubu-1, 7:`. each. The llurns` new improve.-d Dalunt. wire lifter luntn-ru t|l`klIOWlL`dK0(l by all as the best lantern nnmufuctured on the Ame- rican continent, this week. 65. one of the neat. selections of plush goods and so cheap. Spec-uu-los. n splcmhd sir. Tc . and il gcuninu I ebble glass for 2.50. mu 0 v. Knitting needles. beat steal. 30. )0!` so I`: handsome gilt-odrvd invitation on a. with envvlupes imuvh. fur 8c.: nanwriua vonminim: sheets. satin gloss smren. (lb. chrome box. It r'ts.. worth 160. ruur lbs. choice lnumlry.sttm~h in mrtoon boxes for 251: Canadian corn starch H eta. worth 100 The very best corn starch in yellow pup-.r 9 ols.. sold elsewhere for l.`c. Ono's duty is to buy where his money will go fmrthest. lteul In lish Webb halter with best niukled rin up buckles. l9c.. worth36c. Host qtmlit) nl rope hnlter, sold elsewhere for 201: to No. [snap and ring tie lutltvr. for hur.~u~<. cut- Ile. calves, etv... Be.. Worth `.500. Do not ullnw_ your horses and cattle to are loose and kill rwh other when they can be made safe so t-in-nplly. Olotlws lines. 10.. wort It l.')c. The populnr Die il rotatonnd ve etnble n an-iher, worth 750. papers very -st tucks for To. Save time and fuel by using the beat und latest ituuruved lire light-r. l9e. A galvanized pail. 15... worth 250. An extra henvy galvanized poll. '70.. never sold befot for lutu than A 3 string broom, mode frotii he very best green broom corn. 2 for `H-tree ditfo.-rent styles of whisp brooms. loc, worth 25c. New give your children a luxury: Woods potent crndle swing. easily put up, entirely Rule for home or out doors. for summer or winter. 3`Je.. never sold before for less than 01.50. Three dozen best BLM` clothes glue, 7:. A lmudsome spice box in case. six spanned decorated cone in case. worth die. A car loud of tinvmre at these mnst pt pu- lar )I"iCc8. Lumps. lznnps. the rlnest amortiuent in L ie city and so cheap. A time stund lump, All complete. `Zlc. An elegant us.-aorttiiciit of hanging lumps. in beiutty. all brass complete. I2.l9. worth 84. Now in time nu, : mm ulnh. n Tn mu-h. 'l`hn llurns` new iinnroved Other merchants are on the lookout for money Iotiiletlusni over while they hold their goods at full prices. We have been on than lookout for bargains that we may olfcr you what you want at prices you can atfnrd to buy them and he Rind Among our almost endless list: Mrs. Po Ie`sml irons. tho tinost thing ever made. 3 h set with stand. 8l.l9. wurth 82.50. Henson's gloss (lb. chromo box. ti r-ts., worth 150. Inuntlry.-sum-ll lullupulllluuu ulurl u| runvuuuun. Covwr l<`uo.~x'rm~uc.No.-59 Rncurnuc Mun`-` la. Thursday evening. pril 18th. J. S. R. MC- CANN. Secretary. OF'Fl(.`E : Ar Pox.son's Dnvo S10RI. _?__j. T. DIIIII In .-In--nnuuo LIIOIBTIR Loner. No. 83 ot the Sons of Eng- land Benevolent Society. will meet in their new Lodge Room, oon-er Montreal and Prmoeae 31. our Stricken`: Hprdwnre Bwre, the in! an On: Tuesday: of each month. VIM-uI-u Ill uvu r us wuuvwl u. Com:-r Snnnn. No. 19. 0.0.11`. nleots an Tnuanmv. April lath. in thr `F -`rennce Ball, King street. '1`; T. RlNTO.\`,ReC.-Soc. __..._ ...t:_._._..._. DYIING WORKS, PRINO 8'l'RlI'l`. All klndld olundd nluhod. I |>IIt__up ind vo lurch ofrn antic: out vnmmdtoho u-o_b99t_!I_a|_I-1!;-_r!s93' wumrs mm mm 7 cm swmc. ;__ Iluon-I; Boga; I_lootII linden. No. 33. on Mandi . Maymh at `kw ;.E3.%s; N9 3. on Th17n-|dny.v Mny Cnuna . No. 02. on Wednesday. April 1001. at `kl! tun. 1. VI II. I`: 1. I00 Uxmln ml Avsrlcu or mu Gum) ham: or MANCHIBTIK. lcnouun. noel every ' other Friday in the Sons of England Room, Princess Street. Next meeting APRIL 1811!. W. Buaunu. Recording Secretary. lndopondent Order or Forostoru. nun... Irnnuu-unu.n \'...zn Du-an-I an \ Cinndlnn Order Foresters. xv- unn nan In llvlnu. nun-u vu- J. '1`. WHITE any Agent. 15) Buccx S-run. 1'NsUR._ANo_E. _ SOCIETIES. _,_.______.,_ son: of England. I4-n-.4-an Ma. Q! as! M.- I. Agent. tor nu wu. Bnmun Wnfrorrncn. -vnIn -w -v--... -~...._.._-__ IIUNIZY TOIDAN In lu-so or null uumnon I It . `a9Aol'I'|?I|.' hvlng-Inonny tolnvut can always obuun nut.-clan moruncu of the nndanlnad at :1: to seven not com. ` IUTHLVG lIl'IlLC'I'lU.llI.aI IN TI.` l |iUl'U8l'l'IUI`(. In It audacious for no to propose in Oh, no; I cnptivo nrvznnt In the kitchen of Na- nnu told the commander-luchiof when ho could get rid of tho bloichen of hi: Awful lop- rosyand his oolnploxbn baasuu hit on I hobo`: And didn't Chr/ht In ordkotako the ophthdmh onto! uent of thobund mun use a mlxmro of mink and dust! And who showed Bluchnr a short out for hlunuy Iothuunndofukingthnragulnrroad by which ho wou huh eon: upwolnto, ho cunou in (Sun to nvoWnatloo nah- mpol on not an unknown lid whiny`- lnpnoouldnot iirltohllowunuml n . L Irhoun lcthnn Iholtof ull&a.ints," zuhurt cut to View-y.anil am will- to ho: choanpootondor-on um blind . eye and tall homo ot the hrlgadler generals ot ` tho Loud of has how this Iopmsied world 3 lnylnthonnldecadoottho Nlnoteuath` uultury have In pah oolno again aatho nah cl 0 little child. ~ neglnl to quota Iruzn Ullllll uuuuc "um/3, dmanndulnl!tin1o."nndlI.butro:nRavo- Innn Oh; nnvnn Q.-nnnngln I-Jnzhuv Ohnrn all l'UUlliI VHII Iu nu u\Iu. When I say we. l iiiemi the tlvo hundral million Clll`latl&na` now alive. But, as many of them mu not. have enough heart for tho work. let us copy Gideon. and as he had thirty-two thou.~:uu| men in his army to tight the Midiiiniuu, but nniny of th~.~m wore not lunch) of the right stnlf. and ho pi-oninlg:i:e.l nmilitary order saying wlm.<.x>wr is fear- lul and afraid l,-t lllill return and depart early fmni Gilead." and twoiity-txm thousand werenfrziid of getting hurt and went home an I only ten tliousand were left, and Uml told them that even this reduced number was too large in number. torthey might think they had triutnphul independent. of divine help, and so the number must be still further nxluoed and only those should he kept. in the ranks who in pausing the river should be M) in host for victory over their enemies that, though very thirsty, they would without. Itopping A second just scoop up the water in the palm of thvir right hand and scoop up the wulur in the palm of their left hand. and only three hundred men did that. and thaw three hunulred men with the battle shout, "The sword of the Lord and or Gideon, svattered the hlidiaxiitpu like leaves in un equinox, so out of the live hun- dred million nominal Christians of touliv lwt. all ullbL`ll1`\'\.`l`S and cowards go home and get. out of the way. And suppose we have only four hundred million left. suppose only two hundred million left. suppose only one hun- dred million left, you. suppom we only have ftymillion left, with them we will under- take the divine crusade, and each one just scooping up n'pu|m full of the river of God`: mercy in one hand and a palm full of the river of God`: strength in the other. let us with the cry. The sword of the Lord and of Gideon," tho sword of the Lord and of John Knox. the sword oi the Lord and of Matthew Slmpauu, the sword of the Lord And of Bishop Mcllvaine, the sword of the Lord And 0! Adonlrnm Judson, the sword of the Lord and of Martin Luther, go into the [us decade of the Nineteenth century. IUKBLVO IIPRACTICAILI I1` `I'll raoroanxow. I- lo -.u.Ignlnn.n '4\l Inn hm nlhnnnan III nh uinuvluywanglnptupnocywmuur this speedy eonuunnnuonl No. Bomo one begins to qnou from Daniel about "mm, Funn-nntInhnlftlnn"AnrItnknnfI-mn aws `HITIIIIUIIIIA uuIe,Ilu.Uuuwuxwvr hdon thonven tnnnpou. blowing themall atonoolnmnur. Butwithuhnmtrovcronoo I A.|.. _. - OI.` -g---LA.l.. -_A Ind) bl.-- ncoucnlnmycnr. Bntwithuhnoatrovu-once Ihh null thoprophochulnd holctthan h|-nntI val nd xvntl nnvnr Inna:-nil )U`|I.\ (H ||Il' l'AI;.;Il|1'\7lII.lI \. lVIIlrl.lI .\ IlI|.I3| II\'|' IR. U it, \\'rro throo cities to be submerged by one pitch of st-uriat-, ll:-rcuianeutn and Strubaim and p\Illl|)Jii in the latter part of the tirst century lllllsl go under. The Fourth century closed with the most. agitating ecclusiautical war if hi.\'tII`_\`. l.'t`ban the Sixth against Cle- ute.i1tt11\.\`t-uiiith. Alfred the Great closes the .\'iuth L---ntury and Edward lruusulcs the Eleventh t~.-ntur_\' with their resounding deeds The Sixteenth century closed with the estab- lishmout of rnligiuus independence in the United `.\'a-tin;-rlamls Aye, almost every cen- tury has hutl its peroration of overtowering &Cl|i0\`0Ill0llt. As the closing years of the centuries seem a tavoriu.- time for great scenes of emancipation or disaster. and as the num- ber ten seems a favorite number in the Scrip- ture: written by divine direction. and as we a_re sonn tn enter upon the L'Ls`t ten yous of the Nineteenth century, what dues the world propose! What does the church of Christ propose! What. do retnrmars proposal 1 know not; but nmv in the presence of this consecrated nseuibly I propose that we mgnke nmmlv out all nnr Imtturiaa nIn`ntAI nmf nll LTJILQZIVHIEI lIL'UlUI_ V I IJIVIW llllllx VVU ILIIIEU ready, got all our bait/arias pIn`nt.cl and all our plans well laid in what remains of this decad, and then In the last decade of the Nineteenth century march up and lake tins round world fur God. lI L_... I..... ..-,. I ...\_.. .|._ LL... L.... I...` uual" - The Nineteenth oenturyl} departing. After ithaa taken a few m0rerstep,if each year beastep, it will be gone into the eternitles. In a short time we shall he in v the last decade of this century, which fact makes the solemnest" hook outside the Bible, the almanac. and the most suggestive and the most tremendous piece 0! machinery in all the earth, the clock. The last decade of this century" upon which we shall soon enter will he the grandest. mightiest and most decisive decade in all the chronologies.` I am gln it is not to some immediately. for we need by a `new baptism of the Holy Ghost to prepare for it. That last ten years of the `.\'innteem.h cl-iitury, may we all live to see them! Does any one say that this division of time is arbitrary! Oh. no; in other ages the divisions of Dim: may have `been nrhitr:u _r, but our yeah: date from Christ. iloes an _v one any that the grouping of ten together is an arrangement arbitrary! Oh, no; next to the llgure seven, ten is with Gozlafavoritenumher. Abraham welt ten ,$.t`ll`S_ilIC:1ll:l1lll. Ton righteous man would have s:iveT Soilom. In the ancient taberna- ole wer_'~a ten curtains, their pillanx ten and their sax-{tots ten. In the ancient temple were tmila\'ui`snn71t4~n (`H(0Sti|`k\` nnzl ten ta- bios and a niulten sea of ten cubits. Ami the oonnnanclxnents written on the granite of Mount Sinai were ten, an-l the kingdom of God was ili(`.`lI\.`Li to um virgins, anu ten men should lay hold of him that was a Jew, and the rmvanl of the greatly faithful is that they shall rei_~.;n over ten cities. and in tliovtliort tn take the (`emits of tile Nexv Jerusnlexn the number tml swings around the thousands, crying ten thousand times ten thousand." So leoine-to hulk toward the closing ten years of the .\'im~toe-ntli century with an intensity of intol`<~.\t i can harull)` dt`.\`(`I'ii)e. I I, ... . ..l .\ ._ . ....l ol...n 5|... 6'-....-.'b.. 02...`. ANUI uonu-A . bapl` - mllun Income N` om '" Po. h"1"1.L."' and lawn t. Brook ut.. Market. Square. Ul IIIIUI K'.\|. I l CIuII IICII \II`V |IK`~"l IIE. I l1:u'en|snnnti1-wl (hut. the favorite time in. nmny nf tho vcuturics for great events was then t'lu.~`ill'_: fl`1l`(lll('llt of the century. [3 Auwrim tn he li.~mvcred. it must be in the 121.! ml--<-ml. ml` t|n- l"Il`u-nth N=n!ur_v. nzunvly 149.`. \\ u.< {rm mnstitutionul gnverxmwm to be Wl` e.~'l:\bli.~hml in .-hnurivzt. the lust )'enh1uf lhu l~li;_:lnt-nth contury must achieve it \\ .`r.- Ilu-no 1-nus In ha euhnn-ro-vi In nnn sou sum ; nu Got to Be Done at Short Bangs. ; ' l l Bnoolnmc, April l4.-At the Tabernacle today. after oxpoundlng passages descriptive d the world as it shall be when gospolixod. ~ nr. Tnlmage gav out the hymn: People and nmlnm of every tongue Dwell on his love with sweetest. song. Text, `Revelstion xix, 4: Aman; Alb lulal" "IN... \Yinntnau.l>|u nanhu-v in dnnnl-Hun Affhr \ A Flnlng Cioao to Ono of tha_ Grnndent - - "A -1 AI..- 1._-I.l m: WORLD T0%1iE%s;\v1:g DR. TALMAGE SAYS IT cm as DONE nN"1r_ YEARS. .. V -"'--3 v---v vv ---- --- ~--r_ - V . Oenturlou In the History of tho `Vol-Id. -. u-.,__ A unnnnmnm .`."`P`)'v 509W W `G not as gnu lw , oonildorihg tho lumbar of won-nu at will go at it. it one.) It an ho dam. W0 luv. um I wan uvu II on our IIII.nu vu vu- Blnuud ho his g1on-tom uuuol Bleanedwu thohour whoa t.hrouhJounChrh:t mysln tuluuulnndopuoiwihllnl rlluulornuu IlPuanoA.IuuJoIrn. Ityoucontinuotoukmpwhylthlnkthnt thowurhlonubonvodinthonsldocadoof . ' I ' boon it f.";..".`."......"'` -AT" ..`..;.m`.`.'.? .113 now and won In get. reauy Iur we WUIL What ninkrs me think it can be done! First, lnocuusa mind is ready. He needs no long persuasion to do his work, for If ho is not willing that any should perm), he in not willing that anyof the people of tho nut decndo shall p(`l`i.\l]; and the whole Bible is a i chime of bells ringing out Como. come, coma," and you need not go round the earth to find out how much he wants the world to come. but just in walk around one stripped and bare and h-nil:-ss true with two branches not arch:-d but horizontal. But he is wait.- lng, as he said ho v. ould, for the co-operation of the church. .When we are ready God is ready. And he certainly hunll the weap- onry ready to capture this world for the truth, all the vmnpous of kindness or down- tation On the one had. the Uoopel and sun- shine and p0I cr w orchnrdino and gardoniao the earth and fountain: swinging in rainbow and Chntsworthimi verduro and atoms`: poured out of Lhovhlnot heaven, whilo on tho othcr hand hohu thowonponryol do vautation, thunderbolt and and tons planetary-,|ohr. lunar, or no `tactic. that with `loan nip thrown outho neck for a ucond would have ooutollntiona i --A -glgpl... ... _.-..u -nut -vul nhlrqnrl cu: Always obuun nut-can lnorutllli or me I mmd seven r ' N N a 1. NCASH1 FIRE [N8 UR cl a....'...`.?.`.'.."" m" `':"c. n.:.""` u..I In-in nun, M nt, Mgrkntnunl-IL l neck [or nacunn wouw luvo uunluunuuni jnndgnlnhsuuonnuy qnhtuululunnd lwheohouuae bouburdaolhnuon. And I a|.-5' 11...! 1- .._ A..- AA. all nn nun dd: ['R()CRAS'l`lNATl().\' is THE THIEF OF TIXE. The whole trmible is that woput 03 the rompl-etion of tho w.irld`s redemption to such long and inrlenitu distaiicos. The old pro- verb that wliat is eve-rylxxly`s liusiiies-a is nobody`s l>_ti.-.iiies," might be changed a little and be made truthfully to say what is the Gospel businexs of all the ages is the Gospel bttsincss of no age. We are so constituted we cannot get up lllI.Il`ll enthusiasm about some- thing five hundred years from now or n thou- sand years from now. We are ghting at too long a range. That gun called the Swn.nip Angel was a nuisance. It shot six miles, but it lllI`Lll)' ever hit anything. It did its chief destructim work when it burst und killed those who VWTO setting it off. Short range is the effective kind of work, whether it be for worldly or religious purpose. Some man with his eyes ha.ll' shut dronua out to me the Bible quotation: A thousand years are as one dny; that is, ten centuries are not long for the Lord. But why do you no: quote the previous sentence which says that one day is with the Lord as: tliounnd years! That is, he could do the work of ten centuries in twenty-tour houni. The mightiest obstacle to Christian Work is the impression that the world's evnngt-liaititm is away 01!. And we take the t&`lt`N`Ilp0 and look on slid on through centuries until we see two objects near ouch other, and we strain our vision mid guess what they are, and We call great convention: to guns what they are, and weget down our lieuvit-st tlieological V\`0rl;.i and balance our telescope on the lid and look and look and llnully con- clude thnt th-_v are two beasts that we see and the one lllls hair and the till)!!!` lies waul, and we giiezss it must he the lion and the lamb lying clown tug:-tlii-I`. In that great cradle of |MI:i}M*lll`lllt'lll nnd eutnnolencu we rock the vliurvh us though it were an lulpilr ticnt child unvl say, "llush. my duu',ilon`r. be impatient! l)on`t get excited by revivals! Dent cry! Your l~`uther`s coining! Don`t. get uneasy! l1.- will be here in two or three orwn or twenty thousand years." And we not as though we thought that when Mn.- cuuln_y`s famous New Zeulnnderin the far distant is seated on I broken arch of London bridge sketchiii; the ruins of St. Paul`: his grandchild might break in and jolt his pencil asking him if he thought the millennium ever would appear. Men and women of the eter- nal God! Sons and daughters of tbelord .-tlzniglityl \\'t- may have it start in the do- cede that is soon tn commence, and it will be dog) if we can persuade the people between i and then In get ready for the work `Vina! Inultne nun think it (`All & d0[|0 KFBIDQ um M [[1119 WI! JZFI. J.1l!lloIlUl' ' nor Emma], nor mlh, nor Itnlechl, nor Jorami.,h_ no, guy of the niqjor orininor prophetrwtlfhhiir on 'f Ieeend. ~Snppeee the Bible had Announced thdmlllennlum to. begin the year 3539_ that would heno hin- drence. lnoneeansood r-everelnnges his mind, being the same yesterday. todsy and forever. But in another lease he does change his mind.end times without number, every day. and than is when his people pray Didn`t he change his mind about Nine- . vehl By God s command Jonah, at, the top of his voice, while standing on the steps of the mg;-chants` exchange and the Flhtltl laideno of thlll City, cried out, Yet forty days and Nineveh slmll be over- thrown. Wes ig overthrown in forty deysl No. The people gave up their sins and cried for meroy,nnd though Jonah got mad he- causehis whole course of sermons had been spoiled and went into a. disgraceful pouting, We him! the record so sublime, I cannot reed it without feeling a nervous chill running through me God new their works that they turned from their evil way, And God re- pented or the evil that he had said he would do unto them. and he did it not. God is B father, and some of us know whatthnt means, and some time when we have promised chas- tisement and the child deserved it, the little dnrlinghnsput. her arms around our neck and expressed such sorrow and such prom- ises of doing better that her tears landed on the lips of our, kiss, and we held her a half hour after on` our knee and would as soon think of slapping an angel in the face as of even striking her with the weight of our littln linger. God is a father, and while he hm pi-oinised this world scourg- ings, though they were to be for 11 thousand years or ve thou. d years he would, if the world repented. substitute bent-diction and divine caresx God changed his mind about Sodom six times. llo lnul determined on its destruction. Ahmhnm asked him if he would not spare it ii` tit`t_\' righteous people were found there; and. narrowing down the num- ber, if forty-live pmple were found there; if forty people; lf}llll`f_V people; if twenty peo- ple; if ten pmple were found there. And each of the six tirn-~.~` the Lord uuswered, Yes. Oh, why didn't Ahruliuni go on just. two stops further and my if live he found there and if one he fouinl (ll(`l`t`. for then for the sake of Lot, its one good -`itizcn, I think Sodom would hnvo lx-ou.~p:1red. Eight times does the Bible soy thnt H-ul repented when he had promised punishm.-uts nnd withheld the stroke. Was it n .~ll[I of I`nul`s pen when he spoke of God's cuitin-,: short the work in rigliteousnoxxl Nu, l`uul`s pen nover slipped. 'l'here is nothing in the way of prophecy to hinder the vrusnde l lm.Ve[.)l'0p0S("l for the last (l0l`ll(l0 of the .\'inetoenth veiitury. --nu Il\1III`I!| no -Ir\nv< aetermhwon md rudvguad thntif xochug-chef Godwill riaonptoib full work itcnnmnkoDInH`| t5II|0t"0l|'F7 years and hishalf time ton yum Neither Tlnh nnr II`,-nbhn mu` m. I10!` OIOIOI FAMILY E IAKIBI HOUR EIIDZ GRAIN. PBISBID BAY. ODO- V$ AND TIHOTEY IIID. O D. FRANKLIN Inn-r Iomu. UIIIIHHIBG ILOCK I0 CIKOCGO ll'UlII. to L0 you unxan. srnncn & l}_B.UllLEY. Leading Mmm;;}"`tb;;;l.fI3-;f1vdi`.Ifi f'{1Iass-3' A Great Many Ask Why It s We-iD_o-tl_1e Largest Businessin the City in Our Line ? SIMPLY BECAUSE WE BUY IN LARGER QUANTITIES, buy for ossh, save the discount sud give the purchaser the benefit. In the nnderteking, on every one knows, the one who does the lsrgest business can do it the chespest. It requires the some number of horses. hesrses, osrrisges, etc.. to do 60 iunersls for one your us it does 350. We she do our own engrsvlng which is s greet saving. Attend personslly to everylfunersl end with the long experience which we hove had cen sttend to funersls better sud oheeper than ny one in the business] JAMES REID. 264 and 256 Princess Street. 3 l')2Il\ ll . _ . . -- ` HAIR ES 65 LOOKETT 1 Will Remove down street.to Mr. Ward's Big Store in a few days. A good new stock Q . BOOTS, SHOES and TRUNKS Will shown at right prices. ` "c>ITv`i=LouR STORE. Louolpuldlnnyou-I n.Iw.luJ.m The load Com 1 aginonl. (I Annual nlum counts to I and the United but are larger than than ohny other Company. and It. hu an an Haunted noon! at Glenn. J MKS BWIIT. Axon! Sell Brass Trimmed Curtain Poles for 30c. Curtain Poles in Walnut, Ebony and Cherry, 5 feet long 6 ft., 8ft 10 ft , and feet. Brass Tubing, all sizes and 16:1 tbs rsss and Nickle St air lates. Brsss a.ndN1okle Stair Rods. rtain Chains and Chain Hooks. Blind Pails and Picture Neils. All kinds of House Furnishing Goods kept at the Carpet House of w'-v--vv V- '0/SPLA r - or - /vw'; D/2ls`.9 - GOODS II Unequnllod tor Incest Designs, Newent Shades and Lowest Prices. ` All lntendln purrhuen should call at the heading Mllllnery Store to ace the Lancet Novelties Lnrnoct Bloc . and nlwnyl the cheapest HEAD AND L\&.`E VIEITES AND DOLMANS. An , immenoootocklo choose from. Iiiwtiooach. See our Cashmere Hose Mme per pair. _-_____ - ___--. an. 1- n, . In-:n:-_-__ lu.____ inn ._.1 nu i|__---_ -6 o ms AOKNOWLEDGED BY ALL THAT LADIES KID BOUT 990. MD/ES /(/D 81/PPE/?, 65 cents. GENTS FINE SEWED BAL., $1.95. P0/'m`ea or Men /um Toe. HEADQUARTERS SHOE STORE, REMOVAL. 5BNUSSEL& TAPESTRY. WUNL AND UNION NARPETS. GURTAIN PULES from5 feet to 12 feet long. i All kinds of Brass Trimmings. 800 Sets of Handsoma Lacs. Ghenilla, V Madras and other now makes of curtains. ~ Floor 01] Gloths in all widths. .Stair Carpets in Brussels. Tapestry and Wool. Big Stock of Hamp Uarpets and Kensington Arttquares. D. N G, THEP/5 /OE TELLS/1/VD PEOPLE TELL THE PRICE. \ `LADIES WHITE UNDERWEAR, Corsets, Handke_r*chiefE,_ _ * ..a2.mou1. Subscribed GI Ital . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. `Poul lnvoItndg`uIdn upward: o:.......n,uo1.n'. 6 man `how lacunae`. ............... . .6. . t uru: Iqunnt Lou coco - 01?: the Iowa. oun-out man and 01313 use without rohronoo 1.9 ms Band at don. W. ll. GODWIN. Aunt for In \V|l:`g'()uVu;'ICI. WALSH & STEACY GREAT___5PLAY TWILLINGS, 3 'VX7'.A.I..SIEElI 82: STE.A.CY S CARPET : DEPARTMENT BR Reliuble`and` Cloae- Priced Dry Goods Store, Cornet of Princess And Bagot Streets. RICHMOND, ORR & CO. THIS IS JUST WHY I SEE OUR SPECIALTIES- MILLINERY,jLMA|_LL]NAERAY: M'NF,5 39K BURN? uvnvvu Av-nu, \r,vvv,vvv 7- Claims promptly and equitably n ustod. ` hoes by lightning covorod whether re uu- j ones or not. .1. s. R. MCCANN. Agent A nu-DI. 1.` . A... n. nan`; hunn uvnnun l E` FURTHER NOTICE SHORTLY. -_ Spence & Crum|ey s n:a-lAl n:-An 14| Princess Street. Is now complt-zlte for 1889. A full assortment of ;.-.EQ51E.R Y T\"IY'\ 1-` I` Embroideries all widths. BIUVV '|Avww-, ov--- .---_, V---%..- ` Ill ` O. A. CORNELL - PROP. lm ""5.1..""-":n'z"r..".'5 .$".'3":'}.' -l-1]?! IJIOOIIII at um Tgoaunnmumomuuu couuoau The bowyuil and Itablu In town. ONQ DOLLLB PII DAY. musco HOUSE, umm, oNmuT A XRRLIZI , DMD RICHMOND. ORR & C0. ' .'ubTnng;$.* This (`olnrnny in one of tho but in the world. its nvallub a fund: amount to &52.|!). In nddmun which In the unnml liabmuu 01 nhnmhnldnm