Listowel Standard, 22 Apr 1904, p. 2

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tition named in t THE SINS OF THE HEART|* The Lord_Seeth All, No Matter How We Hide ane Cover Up. That man cannot; become pure in heart strated by hu teaching of God' s Word, under man's many , is aeete a above all things 'oronto, eee ure, Ottawa p A Uespatch from = hk Angeles says: Nov. Frank De Witt 'T'almage preached from the following text: Blessed are | the pure in heart, for they shall see God. a0! with and sometimes deluded ee the cheesht on alo man gets whom Jesus referred who drove out down below the surface. "His all- | the evil and swept and garnished his searching eye --, to cod hid-| heart and then flattered himself that heart, He | he had done a splendid and enduring a n gov wholly in hia opinion and estimate a Phy hy externalitics, but G od never r the inner conditten of the won is ad re concern to im of infinitely "more peepee expres- woke up to find his latter condition sion in the life of that which is with- WORSE THAN THE FIRST. in the heart. For this reason, Jes. No, man cannot clean bis heart so Vho "knew what was in ian, tailed pure: He Pap denounced the scribes and Pharisees, | called them whited sepulchers. | Qutwardly to the eyes of mien were intensely religious and devout, faithfully observing the rites and cere- monies, and carefully vietding obedi- emptiness | which teviled back the evil re-en- forced by other evil spirits more wicked than the first. And the man ined, sin-scarred, sin-breeding art e pure oe such as is neces o God's presence. David realized the: usher hopelessness ef the task of trying to purify his own sinful heart, and so in helpless- ness he cries out: "Create for a clean heart, O God!" What man cannot do for himself, God is able for in heart,"' because they bear tho stamp use putrifying bones. He accused them of being careful to cleanwe the outside of the cup and platter, while the inside was Whea Jesus came and convicted by declaring and ing that the sins of the heart were more real nnd more terrible than tho of the Divine tou gins of the outward conduc come fresh and clean and epoticss murderer was rot oni y he who put from the marvelous Inboratory of forth his hand and : fou man life, but he who was angr. wit his brother. The adulterer was not |™Man conditions has been transmuted only he who actually indulged the into the pure gold of Heaven.' Tho pire heart is the handiwork of God. And '"'Bleased,"' indeed. then "are as ord in heart, for they shall, see Go lust of the flesh, but he who even her, for in so doing ke ted adultery with her nlvencty in his oart The thief was not only he) put if sin enter the heart the sec- who took that which pelongéa to 8% lond method of mnintaining a pure other, but he who in his heart covet- (heart is to be applied. The heart for he who price during the past ten A curious sii. in connection with these metals the latter has fallen. much in years. Look FOR ZIRCONIUM. brilliant na splendid gems wort $10 per carat, or $1,590 per ou otc Bgineha is Seolybdenuni which | remarkable ee en h ness, anid yet at the 'game it is exceeding ductile, and a fino alloy for wire-drawing. of great strength are made of it, pro- peller-shafts, heavy guns. rifi~barrels, boilers for torpedo hoats, and armo piorcing shells. Jt is, or was some time ogo, Worth $15 per pound | weight. Vanadium, another scarce metal, one pound, to pounds of stec!, increases ita strength | from seven tons and a half to thir- teen tons per square inch. SOFT, BUT PRECIOUS. pop chs by Sir Wm. as t date patent at the r ton, and is therefore worth, searching for. t is very soft, and | can be cut with a knife. One of its ed another's posscesion, must be cleansed {rom the impurity, is a thief in thought and pert needs (the sin, And blessed od, He only the opportunity to make him jhas made ample provision for such such in very condition. For "if any man sin, * "he IN 2 ' we have an Advocate with the Fath- THE PURE IN HEART! er, Jesus Christ the righteous, ond Just what did Jesus mean? Who /Ho is ve propitiation for our sins are the pure in heart? Certainly jand not for ours only but also Jesus never used words carclessly of | the ahcie world," because Tre | with vagueness of meaning. When 'is the blood sprinkled mercy sent, | He d "pure in heart,' take it \/for that is Hiterally + hi orepitiag | that He meant pes in heart."" And n means, "if we confess our sins an niean nothing |He is faithful and just to forgive us short of qa heart fies from the taint jour sins and cleanse us from all un-- of sin that the 1 |righteousness fer you is pu I wenn that not the |to keep bringing to Him our Jenst Miuherntion or harmful ingredi- ent has entered into its manufacture, To suy that i is pure defines i dition. If have sev candy, not any onc of which i8 pure, I may ray of one which has less acul- teration in it than another that it is urer than the other, and of a third | {J and cieanse. e decs not buke or chide us as wo feel that we deserve when we come to Him (and oh, how often tho fear that He will do so kea us from bringing the ier He oun and t us a f) of comparative or stained hearts that He may forgivo jof 3,150 re- eapa guilty heart for serene: bat true music of Hea' yon fille the chambers degree. f it is pure, it poenniregsrieg of al re from which heve becn incre pure or most pure. And s0 I a And Wit ohn aia of . believe in our text Jesus is not using ror 'a unrest i: -- oe Or: a relative term, but an absolute .one. with Py But di oy i Savi ated A ure ; atid certain oa aay oes not e Sav qu: ity, n st arranged wu sliding scale .» suit varying gredée 'te eaaninw ss oe non eee Do and conditions There Is a dtsposi-leloansing tne solled parents he port of some people to qualify the declarations of Ged. «and to bring them down to man's This js reprehensible. brought to it ? Do the ore mills and ow weary taking tho impure rock and torning out yellow stream of pure gold ? Never! That in exactly what they have been established for, d even as your Father in Heaven is per- | Josus Christ has come for the speci- fect," He meant exactly what He | gc Purpose of cleansing us from o!l said, and could not possibly mean |sin, and He longe to make the heart custhing else. If one begins to quali-/elesan and to it, cle 5 we f. or weaken 'the etaterments and com-|¢daily and hourly bring it to Wim monds { God, where will he end? |for cleansing, It is the privilego of And if one has the privilege of adjus /all to pure in heart, for ting Seriptural declarations to his |blood of Jesus Christ cleanses from own views all have the same privi- | all sin, and "blessed," yea, thrice lege, and the result is that we have | blessed, "nre the pare in heart, for ps many different standards as there ere Christians. Lut this is manifest- they shall see God." ly "wrong, and brings confusion and 'im --+-- vitintes God's Word, It is infinitel ; cer and harmonize our views with (NATURE'S HIDDEN METALS Cod's Word than it is to try to ae- conunodate God's Word to our views trod conceptions. And . When Jesus speaka of the pure 'a hoart, tt was not with the thought that cach to decide for himself just how erm tmpiied, but it wos and fixed condition The pure tn hearts are sin- "FINDS" WHICH MUST MEAN FORTUNES. Rare and Valuable Metals and What They Are Used For. Seercted somewhere in the carth-- perhaps in) the reader's garden--aru me tals of many kinds, which are call- 'his interpretation, however, |ad "the rara motals," t uso 80 far the Ciealtiea in the way seem al Fs ins irmeunt able. Surely, if the , quantities, are those in whom sin, there can be none |is only a case of search and you will | ul henca no one has the hope |an of seeing God, Tut we know that af t big mre TULS LAST IS NOT TRUF. Loew that the infinite purposes of God center about inan, and that it is This longing, loving desire that all earths which fetch in the market. Many them are bought merely for muscums or scientific experiment, but others | should come into His presence God's |8T@ 'ery valunble substances com Czar's subjects. About 30,000 of Vord teaches of o Heaven which He |™¢Teially. them serve in his , and accord- has prepared for man, that he might | Uranium, for instance, from which |ing to the well- informed Seen Bt | dwell with Him forever We know |tho magic clement radium has been Jent of the 'Jewish Chronicle," at St. that from Genesis to Revelation, as |Separated, is worth, when chemically | Petersburg, from 10,000 to 11,000 of | the sin and fuilure and depravity of |PUre. over 3900 per pound. <A ton of those have been sent to the front to man are unfolded, mercy, love |10 per cent. ore would fetch between | jfight against the Japenese forces. and forgiveness of God are gradually |$250 end $300 See and nurses of tho Jewish revenlod tho marvelous redemptive ee PARENT OF RADIUM. faith arc going in eter numbers to wo Lnowing this, we belicve that aes Jesus spoke of the ure in heart He spuke of a condition pos- peat apinonniets, FF fluorescent : "Blessed ore the pure in | there must be such among men. And if there are those who are ren <@ind truly before God pure in heart, it is evident that they ore porcelain. veryone Is aware, wall pitchbiende. pure, not by nature, not self |found? That is not an easy matter. |alty cleansing und purifying, but. they |But there should be no great difficul- | And yet at this very moment ive heen made so by a higher and /ty in recognizing man rare; When recent outrages fn mightier power than his own. We |metals. Each res a ssion in have, then, threo propositions which wo Want to get clearly fixed in mind. First, that pure in ponds, of course, to tests peculiar to itself, and one the tests for a uranium compound is ans a sinful are pure in t the pure inttcart are such not by in- herent possession, Lut because {hey have bee. by Divine trane ling. 4 forming power. With thoze three |, Some of the metals used in ma ur text ogain: ' Dlessed arc tho |imcandescent light are thorium pure in heart, oe 7 snp sec \cerium, oor, rather, their oxides-- God." n|thoria and ccrin. Cerlum was (is more to us, and dice <-- the har- |covered a century o (1803), and nomiou 'the-premise of yes it is still rare. It Sod tWice as "3 half of the. vorse to "te the con- |dear as uranium. an fron- o first clause be- ge was found in 2 1898. Both | 'ian Railway fur fear that they might | compromise the situation. they have been foitnd only in trifling action will, it im feared, be that some | must be present | 2.000 or 3,000 somewhere in large quantities, and it People wiil have d, Altogetker there are thirty to forty ee them to travel by tho railway. a of j from the fact thot the Jews in Ru slo glassware and o fine velvety black to tion of the war. this precious metal is found in Corn- | tributed 42,8 low is anyonc to recognize It when | Emperor to assure him of their' loy- that, when mixed with a little borax | restrictio placed couw more appare: ch sought sai) with the result curious properties is that it makes a |mark on paper like a lead-pencil, j which is blue at first, | low | | altogether. A metal whose supply has never yet ' r | cqualted the demand, although it was | | disrovered nearly two centuries ago-- 1735--Is platinum. Only about four tons and on half was found in the year 1900, chiefly in Russia, nnd it 24.000 per - The value of platinum arises | d how wo havo rosea its resistance to heat and acids. sin- (It docs not melt until a temperature degrees Fahrenheit is reach- ed, and is therefore most useful in making chemical apparatus--such os crucibles, foil, and wire. New Zea- | land, New South Wales, and Britieh Columbia ere good hunting groun for thig treasure. A few of the other ray ere. and men enniitn or ae n (only about half the weight of i well-known cure for gou Palindium, about as hard os steel. Wa- ut. air. of | GALL hag PAYS BEST OF ALL. Iridiu an extremely hard, steel- | | like ineal, is used for watch and cor cate balances, ond as = pen-points. Some three to six thousand small grains go to the ounce, and one of these is taken and attached to the pen with silver solder, then split an ground to shape. Tridium is worth about $1,000,000 Gallium, so soft that it melts ino the hand, makes o much better mir ror ty hppa but of the price no use has yet been found, but which are verv valuable ns scientific curlo- sitics--London Ansters. --s JEWS IN RUSSIA. According to a telegram, Genero Kouropatkin has ordered all Jews to leave districts adjacent to the Siber- The consequence of this arbitrary compafntively poor /1,500 and 2,000 iro pean Russian, as tho Rusmahs refuse to al- The order is the more remarkable At Kharkoff alone they have con- 00 roubles, and have re- quested the Governor to write to the | la then turns yel- | ond in a day or two fades away | Liners, the lightest of all metals me per ton, aod pulladium about $1,500,- r ¥ Persecution of a People Who Are Loyal Subjects. "fGod, writes r forgets th hair. Avoid having the animal fat. and ane such feeds as bran and oil 'meal, P see that the bowels are o- |th he goin at i she fi nt at this time, [nn not be expected that year. . is usually wise to give one poun day leniorn salts give when mixed is not natural - either of them alone. Either of them B separately give o yellowish light of neahnfooe vay little power. Cerium has other nites '2 a cape mtn taf 4 for z = ag oa toeteria ria and sea-sickness. And it is} Ira . r°best, she also 'used in the dovelopment of ani-|must be tion, 80 bl : that shp , ' flesh. Another very valuable and very rare.|Her feed must sod and bone tal used for lighting purposes is »making m Yack of which zirconium. This was discovered 115 |means either 'or cows, years ago, yet mo ono has had (that wien pare in in their the good fortune te find suc de- sy " posit as would make him a atin to ensblé a pis vice aire Tt is present in several strange- |This is more. 'the case if, named minerals, such as eudiolyte, !the cows have through the |polymignite, hyacinth, ete. One vali winter, If giving milk, not blood making Mr. at of pregnancy the cow must The best iden 'ood OW necessary of zirconia aro lis indicated by- pote skin and sicek The manure Molybd- \of po coy in othe 'stabi "should | My he t is slightly on this. od is in the best anaes for cee and to perform senson's yey sie 'to ite ex- her best record |oats a good, Tt; 'drained soil, d of soil temperature will | sme quick and 8 before calv- For a long in which the vast soniéttudes' © oe ocean inhabitants got their livi was @& . Now it is clear that most of our dainty table fishes live by devouring their weaker brethren. The eaker ones prey on enue -- w state where it gets well its natural spread cannot be stopped, t Can tive 'exqontve for the average fruit grow- It would seem to us a legitimate b e state encouragement of this kind will often do muc to induce one to go at the pest, but let the state help only those who are willing to help themselves. SEEDING OATS. Use only good, plump oats for seed), of some varicty known to be well A fanning tion and the burn- | reac than and scale until the vegetable-feeders are h Fishermen have a theory that the very small denizens of th t their support by suction--whether of air or water docs not secn to be cided, Of course, this is nonsense. The Uttle beings suck, certainly. They spend their whole life sucking. But ason thoy suck hundreds of gal- lons of water is for the sake of the microscopical vegetable life it tains in such abundance. the higher fishes will cat nothing but fish. Others cat only lower animals Others, again, devour both. And a few browse on vegetables now and THE TRICKSOM TURBOT. Although fishes of any strength-- such as the hake, turbot, or conger-- ave t before them a menu that nm you hold them in your oats will be swelled by the moisturo and you will nced to set your seeder ac- cordingly. 'This treatinent quickens land aids rmination. Give your seeding at a time when ly 'lworeus tiene iia onl 'ing, and peaches another ey a or. If o will not cate [above Briones but | dee t help to compar 'hs will materially MUNEY SPENT ? IW FRUIT | WHAT 'THE DESSERT or THE WEALTHY costs. se the c e banner ei tent | food im site. With this, it possible to k animal in 'good condition and make as mu milk, as with the samo stalls, all Extravagant Prices Paid for Fruit by Some oi London's of grain in addition. If there is sulf- Rich People. 'ficient corn inthe silage, it will pot | | pay to add corn meal to the ration In some of the very expensive Lon- I believe, for tho average herd of don restuurants you can oraer aA cows, 50 bushels of ears for every special dessert that will cost you lten tons of js as much os can anything from $25 to $250. These be digested and assimilated. Any- desuerts will consist of daintics in ing more is not only wasted, but the way of fruit, for which it is not 'injurious to the animal, hen short too much to say the greater mart | of silage, as many are this spring, is better-te feed. land so contin the succulent lin the ration. | it it but once a duy food of the world has been ransacked to provide Peculiar apples from Zan- zibar, looking rather like turnips, peers, in appearance strongly resem ling oranges, from Northern Africa; dis abn y " nigh oy "Suer iene Ao tien grapes from Minglish hothouses; an nd! [or distillers grains will, at the pres- Australian will most likely be repre- |, wit ti ore milk. ¥et sented by the Eiffel Tower pineapple. am aetitied that no other feed, jgood health and strength. as it ,very rich in eral matter. As | general rule, "T' believe half the tion should ba bran or oats, tf cow has been, jton more. jletter usually sells for more per There {s much more difference mawien opas boarings, knif-edges of deli- te samples of spring bran than be- ng kinds. |; -tween the winter and sprin ) Often the spring In quite as good. day can be fed to tained from al different grains than from alone. gone. pl and ce is to wait unt thero is grain until they get a full food pasture, NURSERY AND ORCHARD. Cx- cept oats, will keep the animal in as is a! ra- t Jl fed during tho win- very valunblo in the mechanism of bran, although costing nearly $2 a in the task of serie! watches, as it does not rust in damp | There i: a prevolent that | spring ic tufertor te winter bran. The | Al /bulletin from the Pennsylvania experi- | bo | I have found no other feed so di- used | will run from 18 to 86 per cent. pro- | tein and from 4 to 10 per fat, | ame rule, as to thelr value, will | apply as in the case of gluten. They | A marked distinction | d- ra- | a'to § far quantity of gress and then turn the first | they will cat night ong the | ouds | pant ate byte ava Lenrson's Weekly. Of all fruits, Zenzibar apples perhaps the rarest. Dozens of together will only henr a few these apples, and the time for ee | ing them hes to be car ofully eclec re tee rees o $25 each, accerding to quality, and, | according to those whose judgment in | much matlers is considered to be ab- solutely correct, must be eaten with PEPPER AND SALT. Two of the most. fashionable fruits the winter monthaA are musca \grares and strawberries, ond until ithe end of January the latter ore be |yond the reach of men of moderate lmenns, A gentleman not long since -- $5 per ton) is linseed meal. It is ' jgent Street and offered $250 to the So ue ge enue Rae a \strawhersies for five people that ev- ening. The mannger undertook to de liver the fruit within seven hours is $21,100,000 per ton, gallium mir- ~ > ors are rarer th the patel itself. spar ih an Steg on salbong sass fea, i itk | ee tore: promptly, proceeded to wire Resides the foregoing hidden trea- hes a ae = arge iri ar ea lin thirty miles of London for straw- sures there are many more for which - berries. cows and often causes troub re- Seventeen gardens provided the wired amount of strawberries (the Bel remaining twenty-three not being able |to produce a single one), and by half- six that evening the fruit was eiivered at a cost of nearly $2.62 for each strawberry. There are soveral |don whose weekly bill for grapes at |this season runs to never Icss than They pay $5 per pound for the es museat grapes, amd receive at persons in Lon- 'n party given some time ago ct Marlborough House the bil for grapes amounted to $225, whilst the cost of each apple at the {Royal tuble was exactly $1 | It i however, by no means ao. the Ce te wea ange for moat distingulshed or -wealthy people 4 ' ing the animal (who spend fortunes in fruit. There jis, for instance, A RETIRED BOOTMAKER living near Brixton who was inform- ed by a friend that pears from Al- ane have oa distinetly pleasant fa- or. Relieved from the worries of piste and other carcs incidental to hig calling. the retired bootwakor had itime to pay attention to such dpli- cate matters, and premptly proceed- ed to order from his fruiterers some ,of these pears, which he found would leost him $2.50 each, His weekly ; bill for these delicacies pid amounts whilst museat and }pincapples at &5 ieee | ring his ifruit bill in the week up to nt Irast | $80-- jut $2,500 o year in fruit alon Curiously enough, oxceypt in the! matter of ffmit, he lives in a very | modernic, though comfortable, etyle. The manager of o well-known fruit- eror's establishment in the West-ond | informed the writer that lots of peo- ple who = high-priced' fruit in the ndow will buy it just to see "what tastes ora "and in this way these by 4 fully spend $1.25 on an apple or a pear to enjoy the experience of ent- ing such a luxw a "How old yeu you gt she was?"" "Well, let's ? When we were in High s | togesher pete to snub me I was a Eid. Now, om sonal, well, um-m-m, should -- ba wag about sl would fill a dozen pages, their tastes laro strictly limited. Tako the tur- 'bot. for instance, This artful fish covers himself with sand, and ossumes the same color os the ground, on hetgges he Joisurely waits until a tit- comes along. Then he suddenly it, and returns to in hiding-place. His food is principally spratea and sand-cels. Wut he ome- times varies hia dinner with a dab, sole, bream, whiting, or pil- In the stomach of a turbot, rises, seizes "The whiting is a cunnil bal. peewig whiting eat the weaker ones without the least pang of conscicnce. rh not so engorced they feed on shrimps, 8, and many other fishes. The Both hako The will dine with equal Satisfaction. herrings, mackerel, pilehards, sprots, or anchovies; while the ling devours 'mackerel, dab, gurvard, haddock, lscad, cuttiefishes, and the octopus. MEAL FOR A MACKERAL., feeds on ig mn He = Tho mackerel, in his turn, 'small sprats and pilehards, very quick, active fish, his prey by sicht, 'ard when he gets; lon the trail of a sprat the sprat is jdoomed, The herring, and also the (sprat and pilchard, depend on very | minute creatures for thelr food. Hence nee have no need for teeth. While, 'the mackere! has sharp, tweezer-like (jaws, the herring possesses a sort | straining apparatus, CGulping in the | water in Immense quantities, he al- ows it to depart through his strain- and swallows all tho sinall ani- ers. jmals left behind. To give o few more cxamples of our lestdevenrs fishes' dictary: The plaice they aro supplied with a sor ed a barbel, w The sole also prefers shrimps the apes with the side of ite ee The john-dory, 50 common in English Channel and round the Irish consts, lives mostly on pilchards, her- p- right, and is so spoueatagty thin: that hin side appears a mere line in the Water. Waiting quite leisurely for eomcthing suitable to come in view, he will gently sidle up to it until within striking distance, and then pounce upon it with unfailing suc- cess, The spring dogfish is the terror of herrings, eprats, inackerel, and whit- dena that aeriously interfere with the fisherman's work-- only devouring his lawful prizes, but ham- pering him both in net and drift fish- ng. MRS. CONGER, CANNIBAL. The angler gets his food in a re markable and very ensy manner, Con- cenled so weil that the sharpest-cyed fish cannot distinguish him from tho rock or bolder beside which be is this monster--he is sometimes o and touch of ligntni nd allows them, bones and all. Eels pi cat ane thing they can swallow, dead eon easily deal and never with their spouses, the: thei when feel- Sheaitate to swallow ing hungry. What do the sinaller frhes, are the prey of the larger, which eat? Sand- | ' younc. Sprats ext very minute low- jer enimals; ane there, in most cuses, feed on the immense massca of vege- tulle matter that permente "he ore- jan and lie on its bed ond shores, It Le Not only the very minute animals which practlee vegetarilanisin. Tteri- iwinkles, for instance, gruze on th 'eeaweed which grows at the margin jof the sca. Tn the een It is evident that a -sav- ge state of things prevoils. Our nd animals are much more civilized in their manner of getting a living. PITY THE rire LIE FISHES, a Comparatively few land animals are carnivorous, while nearly all fishes live on animal prey. For the weak- ling, life in the ocean must be full of | anxicty, for there Is no security night or day. Fish like the mackerel, which hunts by sight, can catch their fo only the daytime. Lut ground fish have sensitive touch or- gangs and acute smell, and they can f The sole feeds only at night. . it Hes buried" n the mud all day. and seldom makes its appenrance until after dark. But nearly oll-the animals which serve as prey hare some way of pro- tecting themselves, although it op- pears to avail thom little. Some who pursues 2 i |rake the soil for shrimps, worms, etc. d worma, for which it hunts by tapping rings, and bigs, ba ~eg Rasspeed eels ent sprate, as well a9 their own | must insert be and 51 ae. whole of mate, viii. (Sound omy in that gospel) an the whoie of John vii., 2 to xi (found only in John). bring us to taia lesson, which, is re- corded only by Luke. The time sare ing come or drawing near that should be received up, He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem (ix., 51), although He knew all that awaited Him there. It would seem that the . ee forth of the seventy t appeal ere His crucifixion. They care to go before Him unto every place into whieh He Himself was about to come, wing a power and stirring up a race of ex- pectation, In His prayer he said concerning His followers, Thou hast sent Me into the wort, even so have I also sent world" (John xvii., i now sends us aa is with ua. That number of the enty miggests all nations may not be. so clear unless you have counted and x. to Pisa) aon were Lord's argainttng and uniess Iie appoints and ordain all is uscless ( xv., 6, 1 The command which He gave to the dis ciples in Matt, ix., 47, repeats to the forth laborers sho jeans He would is still sounding in, into His harvest, ur cars, for the hervest still is |grent, and the laborers are few. CS] | Lord is still saying, 'Whom shall I j send and who will go for us," (Isa., ra Pe 8). Hut there few who nnswer | \"Here am I. Send me.' When I lust wrote notes on this, | pertion of Scripture in 1889 our mis' | sionary in- | terest, nual offering--was ly beginning, felt grateful to be able to yenr $553 to help obey 1 after hat it reased from $2,000 to 81.000 a year umftil 1896, Bible then it has ne er 000 a year, and 3 'was over $218,000, without any fort to raiso a cent cf it beyond mentioning the need ond calling at- tention to the command | The marching orders of the seventy 'are very largely our marchi orders now, though after His death and res- urrection there was some change in whole world 1 kinds of 1 ' ami- trom nrg quickly go bad. These -- We with skittully vhiey (ns Jon continues in the wicked one (Rom. : , yen sold in England at [Crs resor-fish and drag it out of | 'iii. 7; 1 John v. 19, R- 4 be =) ae ey re The - a - ha: give ordercd, er tho lop; or f pi. | the eres: of Christ must be best the sabia having "would ev dream of keeping them |vaive ha if aahe oF t i of bi le --_ - = ga gent pesca aed 8.2 nearly or auite nt ] _-- rotein and | #" : able he will be h di Se EN Gen eae eee -- nearly or quite ax Ruch protein and ec eis apples ace another expen: (Able be will be happy on dinner of lenges or the "messagy, 'The pared lor mized wheat f ~ aper than brig! juxury. ey can be purchased Red mullet feed on the und j | bles of the sowar and the wheat and t prices ranging from 75 cents to A of pick- tares cover this whole age. But the messenger has only tu get his mes- sage from God, the povpr of the Spirit deliver it faithfully estly, and the Lord will always ac- comptish His pleasure (Isn. lv. 11 We ore to hav o a outfit < or nenses, but. leu oO fends Ub, take care . 25-38; Luke xii, 22, G., 7.) We are not 40 waate time on the mere courtesies of the world nor. seck honor one of another, but be whole heartedly the King's o own., Preaching peace by Jesus Christ to all world, an fy for, having made peace by the blood of His cross, He puls in the hands of the redvemed the commission to procinim i{t far and wide. He has had compassion on a lost world, and if His Spirit Hills us we will show our compassion by giving ireely,, that which we have so freely receiv-! ed. The God Peace and tho Prince of Pence are calling for mes' news of redemption by th Christ tat Whosoever wil cept c justided by e tod Shige Jesus Christ casa xiil, | 20, med 6; .v. 1). The minand "Ent such e tees as are ne before pen " is a vox linpor- tant ono i © Meseenger desires to | commend Pigg message, but there are many Christians even eVange- lists, teachers and preachers who are so «fastidious about eating and * | drinking, - sleeping arran attendance, that neither host, host- J wate er ee gbo their heo These siomeongere of our lesson | were to henl the sick as well as to exceedingly 1a), Abound os twelve and the seventy. are still and always hav iniracles, no one can deny, but sce in se 20 something better than miracles of healing. ----$--<$$$_--p--_--_--__---- ONE IMPROVENENT NEEDED. ay colonel in the French army, who a keen eve for neatness, bwt not ele of an car for music, took oc- baht ono dey to compliment his Add on the of his nen. "Their uniforms are ncat,"" said sea lonel, "and their instruments nicely polished; but there is one sad I must insist upon." ne One, tro! One, two!" Wise Beoreece- Sie (in cheap lrestaurant--Here, walter! This food of them hide in holes and among the seaweed? others build tubler struc- tures; others bury oe in the ground.--Loncon ts ye. 'and I "out presets to for. the proprictor?" Waitor--Iio's gies beice to lunch, sir.' Text of "tas Lente, take x., 1-16, Golden Text, Luke x., 2 Between the transfigvration and the sending forth of the seventy we must' not only consider the events of Luke' when from, .

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