LiveStock ice, 'ABLIS 011 $66 tel O35t0040 Y AND DAIRY f work wanwWRanwmm 000000658900 mmmmmmmwmmmm mmmmwmxwmmmm 11 Market light h Market anther. March $114 and North- ammmww 000300 0 ad 01 to. t '6 0 $34 8 oobnoe mmum 00000 Owo mmwo $000 I a O. 60 Sunday ï¬mx 3 ,043 tw.2 w“ wwww 333 2 wawwmw 43443 wwod tt 005 548. 42433 300to340 4401:05 00t0038 00w078 388888 €386 mmoï¬uw inmmï¬ï¬ ï¬ï¬ OO 60 to WMQ’W: > XLVI No. «on. .59 >m<=cnmu..><omm::h (Swazi .. ......,-._-, SC per | | ova guaran market price of ordmzry‘ spring "h“ when properly harvested‘and gleaned. The FLAVELLE mum at or willgiyo out the seed on contract ,_ L-_-L -I Wheat for sale at ~ $1'.oo* Per Bushel Seed Wheat andyouwillsayitbthebstll Canyouevcrspent. Gd to Gregory’s And get a Bpttle of If YOU HAVE 5- GREGORY; Corner Drug Store. â€ably. A Cough, floarseness, Difï¬ctu in Breathing Sore Throat, . Bronchial! Troubles Dr. Karl’s l‘amarac Cordial FOR SALE c-uâ€"v-vu .- â€"â€"â€"â€". thatpold brown may-pill at Pompeii and view a, real lava. bod. Thin); o! a. valley 10 uni)†long and 5 games, wide advent! with red make 190 feet est trial the missionary has. 1t 18 not the danger of theft or murder or disease, etc.. but the lack of a. touch of "the milk of human kindness" in the ordinary round of daily life that wearsonthemostoius. This is half of the blessing of this place. - Then there are‘ the mountains, the everlasting hills. chief among them being the beautiful volcano Assms Yams. It is 8000 feet high and 8 miles from the village. Every hour {or so it explodes sending up a. col- Maxim massâ€"at least I am. , Well that was-a mistake. we is rock." Write it it: your “hot: 137:. ï¬n is? 1 Wk “"13: â€.9" {00-0 ' your. ~ that!†s 11m.'._~o'6t 169a frog I am afraid to enter upon a. des- criptlon of Kamizawo, lest the muses carry me away to some lofty piano: ‘ do of thought beyond my equilibrium point. and I totter to destruction. But if you pick me up when I fall, J. P., I shall attempt .to show how the all-wise Father has provided a compensation ' imnutune {or shit work- weafled children. There were fully 600 foreigners here last summer. We had the venerable Dc. Ashmore from the seize 0' Path: and other north survivors of the noise' and Dr. Ewingof Lahore. In- dia, whom I heard at Clevehud four years ago. We had English preach- in; twice on Sunday and “English Watts on Wednesday even- in'g. ‘ Wehadpleasantchutamihgb Til-h and English handshakes. and little visits and introductiomnew ( Meade. I believe that the In. ’ 'I'hen liventured on the train and struggled through to Kmignwn. When I arrived I could not walk 100 without exhaustion and appe- tite had all gone. In two days I {was so braced up that I went on n itch-mile tramp over the mountains before dinner. It was the cold brac- ing air which set me up. I‘like the place so much that I have decided to make it a. recuperating place. "Dan" (Rev. D. Norman) and I are art-11111;b ing {or a. double house and so we shall he more intimate then ever be- fore. Dan and his wile visited us {or a week shortly after their arrival in Japan. Mrs. Norman lean excel- lent woman. ‘ I was so sick and weak that I could not pack my trunk-had to Lie in'bed and watch my poor wife try- ing to do it and nurse the baby at. thesametime. Igot as turns Tokio and'had to stop at Dr. Ken.- chun’s a. week, under Dr. McDonald's Vase hou'scs and about 100 foreigners] cottages. But the charm is in the air. It is like a Wth from {ather- land when one steps out on the plat- Iorm of the village station. son in this climate. It has been most critical period in my We om the physical standpoint. I have ways had a fair share of _0 (all back on but irom March until ins weakness. An hour of study _would leave me exhausted. In April the spxr'n’g rains commenced. They continued until the end of June with creasing heat. You cannot ima- ‘gine and I cannot describe the wea- ther at thst season. It rains al- 08t every dayâ€"olten five days and nights in melon, and that in tor- rents. 'hen the rain ceases for a time, the sun is scarcely seen for the steaming atmosphere. but his heat is felt nevertheless Not a leaf flutâ€" ters‘ the' air is dead and stifling In July the rains cease and inlenae heat prevails until the end of September. There is nothing for it but to seek‘ higher ground. We went to Karni-é ma. a famous resort for {magnet-m1 200 miles northward. It is the‘ highest v‘llage in Janaâ€"noon t 8200 . abovethesea.‘ It asqualid snuggling?!“ of†â€A _ _ No. 8 mum Kuubuko. Cho. , salmon.Dec.81h,1901. lly deu- J. P. ,â€"-Your welcome and , ng letter came to hand lut eekundIhasténtorcply° ' ' ' out {or a. led out, of my own book. lace writing you) we have passed through one spring and summer nea- Vood and Little Britain; It. m- bOraon in being supported in the F10- Iuy Kingdom by the Leagues that. suit. km. From persons! noquulm sauce with ma clbver And dcvoted ni’monary, and with his work a In. em. mini-set. we hen-my com- mdhintbtheiutemtandud of u: Mend: of than local Leagues and the lordgn work to'which hand *they are so ndfly contributing. . Hen-with is published a letter from it. hum. It. was meivod by gentle.» {dud or his and a. succesr‘ [fl brother minMer. Rev. J . P. ‘ fl'ls W Van: Cassius Wflta L in. Jspss Aha-t m: Work ‘ Not at our nodes may know that. the Epworth Leagues o! the LInduy and Cannington districts of the leth- must. chqrch sent s. missionary to Jspsn about a you .30. They did. He is Rev. Rom. Emberson, a young du‘gyman, well known to the people 0! Marlpou. uncanny. became“ he was {ormCfly‘lunior pastor st 00.]:- msslounv I. W5 nassme 1‘0 VICTORIA Lemmas A CHARMING SPOT ot Bocverton. It in as to]- It is a thousand students in Normal and High schools who read English and are eager to get hoid o! a story book and Wally biographies .of great- men. There are signs of the spirit/s work on every hand. While you are calling on Him. He answers. Yours in bonds that are holy, baptize for every Sunday since Octo- ber lot. and lately scarcely a day has passed but some fresh seeker ior christian teaching has besought us for light and help. Said a young won last week. “I never go into your home but I think how sweet a for- eign home isâ€"so dimmnt from a Japanese home. I intend to devote my life to trying to teach my people how to make the homes sweet." Said another the same dwâ€"u. Normal school studentâ€""I am going to teach and I am very much ashamed that m country has not 0, good religion. I desire much to know Christianity thnt I my teach it to the children." SEND A BOOK Hy greatest need (or my work is a. good reading room with a small li- bnry to lend to the bright young menwhoeomeinmnee toourhome‘ every week. I think I shall hove toi appealtothelequeetohelpmein‘ this. law oi the ‘ young people could contribute g book. There are “13m. despite the thaw, limitations we as tble to triumph in Christ. The Lord has given us a convex-3. ‘to are reed from back to front. The words are in perpendiculgr lines in- stead of horizontal. The upper right hand corner instead of the left is the start’ng-point. The surname of o. 1pemon is ï¬rst and the given name last. The subject 0! an English sen- tence most frequently becomes object in Japanese. . Customs follow a sim- ilar rule. . Anglo-Saxons go straight to the point in business. The Japan- ese elways brings a third party as a butler between him and the one with whom the contrect is made. I have paid rent for n year (or this house end hnu never sea the landtord that I nm â€are of. though he Eves quite 30 can“, it 811 mu 0).. m, influx-ad grad. with numb: rheumatism in his and could not. walk for two months. Four bgttlu 0! Dr. 3011’: mm ‘ an and. 0. vol! mu of kin. T113- {2‘ blood pain-r1- punphbot- «Imam-9' 4‘â€: M Bon- peoplo boom. to alarm 711.3113an that. ï¬lly cannot walk for month: a s M In John Council, Maid Kills, Ont, A man who habitu y “puts the cart belgre the horse" ught to get on well in this country. Almost ova-ythtng is. done in reverse order lrom the English mode. The books The nil-engaging duty or the pres- at and the near future is the study ol the language. Paving over it. burned beneath it. lost in the midst of it. bound hand and foot by the lock or it, we plod away at this stupendous task. Give the follow- ing message to the Conference E. L. Convention for me : "I! you have not heard from your missionary tor a longer time than you anticipated, take out your note book and make this entry 'It’s the language.’ If you 1 do not hear from him in the near future and as soon as you expect- ed. take out your note book and : make u uecond entry by the side of the ï¬rst. ‘It's the language. ' 11 you are questioning what you shall ask God's special gruee to be bestowed upon your mission- ary for. I suggest you make a i th‘e-d entryâ€"‘l-‘or the languoge.’ " iIdonotmeanbythatthntIenn- notlenrnthelanguase. tot-Ian; Inordolmennthntlunnotlurn- K {5.11m But I Want R. because {r 1:7 :55 â€rehme hence to every 1:: onuy becomes the crowning duty, and because it is an intensely dilï¬cult 180808-89 and its acquisition is often attended with great risk to the health 0! the learn- el’. n spring at the hue o! the well wherewehndtocutieetoget I capital and while the compnny were served it froze up egnin. A few feet from the spring the thermo- meter would register 90 degrees. But there are more' beautiful pieces. ii :not more wonderful then even these. the description 0! which I shall re "serve for now future letter. Sumac it to m that n few weeks in con- tent with the wondefol works of God such as are lying about the little squalid fluke. n iew. weeks converse with God's devoted ones. n iew weeks inhnlntion o! heaven's sweet air is balm that God has provided for is weary ones in the fer east. We returned In September fully restored out! here been quite strong ever since. thick. Think of walking ‘nlong .l hob-pun in the forest. and suddenly running plumb into a rock wall 6') or 100 feet perpendicularâ€"not o. to}? ‘K wall but} wnl-l ofrocn o!’ and» noun dimensions, broken. shivcred. jammed up, piled up. crushed up in every conceivable form and in every imaginable positionâ€"n veritable ocean o! rocks. You climb up among the crevices to get a View of the top What. a. opectnclc! A world in it- 3oelf! anlqyo nnd maintains {orna- eddluvmdrocksgreetthegueu lnr u'the eye can trnvel. ‘AbOll‘L 100 you- .30 are volcano sent. for“: this nwful nvnlanche. The pot-Hf!- ity 0! God destroying the enrth nu‘ Minted by St. Peter in no longer a. problem In the pro-once of such dim phys otpower, Beneath theme rock" the ice never thaws. We dunk tron. COULD NOT WALK. ART BEFORE HORSE THE LA NGMAGE 76¢. a Year In Advancc: 8| If not so Paid R. EMBERSON. .Bryce says that 50 per cent. ~--Tho Americms propose a ship “My bill which is described as “a. Raga-at puma. " Blows are . oom- m 'produbt. e. -â€"-Dr. Worn of Montreal. has Ibsen W by Dr. Rutherford of: But PM as veterinary adviser to ‘the Dominion‘ government. Dr. Ruth-- «ford will live in Ottawa. -â€"The Ontario goQ'emment will; giVessOOaneartohelpmaintaina. Canadian maul-«8' showroom. in London, has. wâ€"A Toronto mn claims to have- «to a. rainbow .upsido down on 'nmm. And 0'11] («810 are peo- nlu who object to prohibition . --The. wife of n refuge at Mateâ€" khx. Presented him with four children 6.0 day last Week. He will (eel like fleeing again now. W. R. Ridden, K.C fur defendant. years. On several occasions )ebre his death John Cobble had approach- ed'diflerent people asking them to take all his propertyt and keep him (or the remainder of his life, but his otter was nbt aoeepted.’ He had made this ode:- to the plaintifl but she declined. Finally John Cobble sold his farm and moved into Cobo- conk where he was living alone and In a state of destitution. He was visited by Rev. A. B. Chalice and the late Mr. Holland. to whom he ex- ,Pnessed a strong desire to have the detendant take him and keep him and take all his property. They sent Dr. ‘iPitzgerald to see him and the doctor it Cobble’ 5 request asked the defen~ dent to take Cobble and care for. him otherwise he would die cf neglect. Mr. Burtchaell thereupon sent his son to bring Cobble to his house and on the way Mr. Cobble called for his pa- pers at Mrs. Foster's where he had left them for sale keeping. He told Mrs. Foster he was going to will all he had to Mr. Burtchaell. , A day or two later Mr. Cobble asked the deâ€" iendant to bring Mr. J. C. Fitzgerald and have him draw; the will, the deed and an assignment of the mortgage. This was done and the papers signed in presence 0! Rev. A. B. (manee and Lseveral others. The deceased had often expressed a preference for the defendant and seemed most anxious to have the defendant take care of 121m. Ir. Cobble died the next day although it was thought when the papers were signed he might live for years. The whole estate'was worth about $1000. The case was tried last Kay before Chief Justice Falcon- bridge'. and judgment was delivered in August dismissing the action with- out costs. From this judgment the plain“! appealed to the Divisional Court. The appeal was heard before the Chancery hidden on the 5th and. “It. last... when the appeal was dis- ahead with cents. ' .3. Watson. Ht.BeII. a-ncuam Winthe “0"!le Last weekllensrs. F. D. Moore and, Thea. Stewart Were the local law- yers in an action brought by Sarah Cobble, the widow of John Cobble, deceased. to set aside the will of hen husband. nude in furor of the deten- dant Benjamin Burtchaeu. and also a. deed and assignment ol‘mortgage made to me...mn.t.,y,m plain- an married John ‘Cobue‘aboui _ 25 The robpt Candler: who expressed himself much pleased with Bronson. “‘your pretty Kansas tovm." said : 1"Nothing gives me greater pleasure than to describe Canada's ldbent re- som'ces.,nnd to diapei illusion regard- ing our climate. As a fact. although I wear my regular winter clothing. yet yesterday end toâ€"day the cold in thianr southern Kansas region is the most penetnting and cutting I hnve experienced {or years; while there is more snow here than was in Ontario a. week ago, and our North- west has practically no snow yet at all. The winds too. here, in KanSas seem to pierce not only clothing. and houses, but ones very bones." Col, Sun. Hughes. umber oi the Ctnldlan parliament, a resident. of Lhidsay.0anadg~.ipento.hwdaysh and uound Brannon this Week. 00!. with distinction and an . is here visitinghis triad Hr. L. . Collins. whomhethcnuldlastlafl. In winwmththel’flottheioi- lowing very interesting inimtion W by Kansas farmers living than? How is it. possible to have such ï¬ne mine!- as they describe fully two thousand miles north-west. at here 7â€. [tells of Interest . D. loom for plaintiff : IN THE COURT W â€I KANSAS . und '1'. Stewart Si