E'v;:. &hm ats sver Orl with H: s. Be afraid of but not of fresh air. tious food and drink milk. Do not forget t‘s Emulsion is the e most thoroughly . _ Even these are ully relieved and life catly prolonged. are these remedices ? air, proper food and ‘s Emuislog ada nd gi e Bakers DDY CO ‘PERS E No 42 1899 "~C, Chemists, Terento, W Syrup is dviceo to C > dvanced tWntc IvIng h 1899 2 Neovep 10 a9g And ATOR d Perhaps these smail insec ances will come in the shape mestic irritation. The parlor The small insect annoyances of life sometimes come in the shape of local physical trouble which does not amount to a positive prostration, but which bothers you when you want to feel the best. Perhaps it is a sick headache which has been the plague of your life, and you appoint some occasion of mirth or sociality or usefuiness, and when the clock strikes the hour you cannot make your appearance. Perhaps the trouble is between the ear and the foreâ€" head in the shape of a neuralgic twings, Nobody can see it or sympathise with it, but just at the time when you want your intellect clearest and your dispoâ€" sition brightest you feel a sharp. keen, disconcerting thrust. "The Lord sent‘ the hornet." 2?3 y‘e&terday."’ I said,. ‘"Yes , § No use, no use. railur? * C ~M‘ I saw that you preached to the young all decent men would have applaudâ€" ed the heroism of the man there were those to hiss. "The Lord sent the hornet." And when afterwards that man sat down on the western coast of Africa, sick and worn out, with perhaps the grandest achieveâ€" ment of the age in the way of geoâ€" graphical discovery," there were small critics all over the world to buzz and buzz and caricature and deride him, and when after awhile he got the London papers, as he opened them, out flew the hornet. ‘When I see that there are so many people in the world who like to say disagrecable things, and write disagreeable things, I come almost in my â€" weakâ€" er moments to believe what a man said to me in Philadelphia one Monday morning. I went to get the horse at the livery stable, and the hostler, a plain man, said to me, "Mr. Talmage, thing depressing, and i God I have kept the re people of whom I speak in the great harvest fic &nent. Some day y sâ€"hilariens "(Good depressing information. sent the hornet." eC ty n gloriou hornet Th wasy word an sh th 1 them. We steed of «c My friends, when we by great behemoths of become chivalric, _ and them. We get on the S "an_neir country. What gleamin sword and chariot of war could no accomplish was done by the punctur of an insect. ‘"The Lord sent the hor mas it in iims burning and noxious out the Hittites and th from their countre n and t This t alighting c tain death covering we thing that se hornet goes i over hundre lancet. In bo: cautiously look hung from the we woere Inat na In my text the its mission. It is swift in its motic sting. Its touch | beast. We have run bellowing un &n rana . t« ; __ . Califpiate the huâ€" man race. It bombards the grainâ€" field and the orchards and the vineâ€" yards. The Colorado beetle, the Neâ€" braska grasshopper, the New Jersey locust, the universal potato beetle, seem to carry on the work which was begun ages ago when the insects buzâ€" zed out of Noah‘s ark as the door was opened. nd h It seems as if t1 were determined to man race. It bom field and the orchar yards. The Colorad )] gain n Dr. Ta]n which ap ditions of cides Ior these insectile annoyâ€" s of life, these foes too small to t, these things without _ any rdupois weight, the gnats and midgets and the flies and the s and the hornets! In _ other s, it is the small stinging â€" anâ€" nces of our life Which Avrica na 18 ©60000c are s > Persians attempted to conquer ristian city, but the elephants the beasts on which the Persians were assaulted by the hornet, so the whole army was broken up, the besieged city was rescued. burning and noxious insect stung o & j [3 4 _SCICH We are assaulted eat behemoths of trouble _ we e__chivalric, and we assault We get on the high mettled of our courage, and we make ilry charge at them, and if God th us we come out _ stronger »tter than when we went _ in. ilas for these insectile annoyâ€" mÂ¥ Heé~ ui. & me TY ninutes b They do the small insect annoyances e to us in the shape of ind acquantances who are saying +disagrecable things. ‘: some people you cannot be balf an hour but you â€" feel nd comforted. Then there people you cannot be with In boyhood we sly looking at th . tlext _the hornet flies out on ion. It is a species of wasp, its motion and violent in its Its touch is torture to man or 'We' have all seen the cattle nwrfwls 0s 12 but they ‘y gathe , 7. â€" _ °rCe Dranch, and while looking at the wonderful ve were struck with someâ€" sent us shrieking away. The s in swarms. It has captains reds, and twenty of them n one man will produce cerâ€" me VC aâ€"Bug snl, the gnats and the flies and the hornets! In _ other small stinging anâ€" life which drive us tree branch fore you U 18 101 amount but which to feel the _ headache f your life, n of mirth and when nat 1 never ild say anyâ€" _ the help of lution. Thege eap and bind 1 of discourâ€" greet them orning," and 1¢ inseCtime __ extirpate the the cut of its ve used to stand the globular nest cs."" / He Man‘s a of a doâ€" and the BPe vas Droken up, was â€" rescued. Us insect stung thse Canaanites Vhat gleaming war could not y the puncture ean i you ill the it T tik rand and _ sent the feel misâ€" _to disâ€" u_ to the the yarn )yâ€" hijctstantiint ids i ts cA c â€" 4h grainfield sooner than the in three or four cattle. You sa I lost my child, since I lost perty, I have been a differe But you do not recognise the ture of little annoyances that ing, digging, cutting, shaping, and interjoining your moral Rats may sink a «hin â€" (Mm. UTC TC EHEFD LWÂ¥ 1 must do it the other way,." So he works on, and after awhile the features come out, and _ everybody that enters the studio is charmed and fascinated. Well, God has your soul under process of development, and it is the little annoyances and vexations of life that are chiseling out your imâ€" mortal nature. It is click, click, click! I wonder why some great providence does not come and with one stroke prepare you for heaven. Ah, no! Go@ says that is not the way, and so he keeps on by strokes of little vexations until at last you shall be a glad spectacle for angels and for men. You know that a large fortune may be spent in small change, and a vast amount of moral character may go away in small depletions. It is the little troubles of life that are havâ€" ing more effect upon you than great ones. A SWArM of locusts wihny lamn conâ€" picture. I go into a sculptor‘s see him shaping a statue chisel in one hand and the other, and he gives a strokeâ€"click, click, _ cli "Why don‘t you stril "Oh," he replies, "that w the statue. I can‘t d way. I must do it the So he works on and afra with the pene you put it on : Mr. Church;: painting. It â€" touches." A: friends, to un ten thousand der God, are h alleri ok a sla ti Nothin he an n it 000 i1 jleargami,, 1. _ _ 48 account, or the unâ€" derselling by a business rival, or the whispering of store confidences in the street, or the making of some little bad debt which was against your judgment; blut you wanted to please somebody else, ‘"6, Or the extrava who overdraws his derselling by a bus whispering of store 14 "a ce / P â€" y2CiL ‘Pe > a~glad for angels and for men. now that a large fortune spent in small change, and a unt of moral character may in small depletions. It is troubles of life that are hayâ€" _effect upon you than great swarm of locusts will kill a sooner than the incursion of four cattle. You say, "‘Since 3 chilq. since I lost my. oroâ€" als tat thr of ornet itura rtan LI ive t was th life I hay my nese 1 K 2""° {Cecognise the architecâ€" ° annoyances that are hewâ€" . cutting, shaping, splitting ining your moral qualities. sink a ship. One lucifer sPiders, and they ¢ ‘e. And I really be annoyances of our the spiders of the 8 atmosphere of our s raubaidcs 42 .i in io 1y congregation that their annoyâ€" es are multiplying and that they e a hundred where they used to e ten. The naturalist tells us that asp sometimes has a family of 20,â€" wasps, and it does seem as if every ovance of van» H#s Auscnog O m nds 1@ i annoyances * making up to be hung at heaven. fit fm act th nB sWb en trdtrizinito uts >3 ncil so long? Why don‘t in one dash?" "No," says "I know how to make a will take 50,000 of these And I want you, my nderstand that it is these Ahaiidnaitiben Of Inst >y th ) shov ENITC C RERCRCTUITE chiseling out your imâ€" It is click, click, click! some great providence ' gnd with one stroke annoyane + wake us RY ne gives a very click, click! ‘I mept. 24 and 1893 who are annoyan 11 us the cl e formed all annow )e hung at last in the ven, fit for angels to 10ws how to make a n Ou _ strike _ harder? "that would shatter can‘t do it that ) it the other way." and after awhile the ut, and everybody 0L no us tells us ulptor‘s studio bl t )f in rriment nb high inment. 1 ti t in. Then the gymnast n each hand, and he beâ€" _ one inch at a time or nd sgetting his strength aches after awhile the t seems to me that these life are a moral gy uanaâ€" ‘riment a peg with which ib higher and higher in nment. We all love to a different man." U the furn your ,, CS economy. They 1 they clear the atmosâ€" eally believe God sends of our life upon us to of the soul and to clear of our skies. J inces which, unâ€" 5 up the picture . _ Cotopaxi or his I suppose about the canvas sayâ€" ep me trembling mng? Why don‘t ‘lone, pinion thy. thing achin »lp U did Jjust so much ‘ usefulness â€" and mly â€" question is ke it in the bulk ranulated. _ Here 8 it in bulk. His his eyesight put vful calumity beâ€" vast majority of hings â€" piecemeal. ching teeth than ter ten fly blistâ€" n, better twenty one. There may inion as to alloâ€" hy, but in this ike homeopathic of annoyance )ckdown doge of vthe thunderbolt the t] If you s are sent on us, I up from our letharâ€" hing that makes a _ studio _ and e. He has a _a mallet in a very gentle wilt keep him mind is stayed urnace will ever linker and the 1 this theory in yances and vexâ€" t th at deal come in than to the same °s seem as if every life brooded a milâ€" ur patience. In 1d upright paralâ€" ‘r each other for ib he history of some Mr. Church is of the country. be the arrogance Sss of employers; fact, we all admit )the Oh _want to cor Lord sent th 10 ar V in say, rsuade us world for ve sid sner in love to (â€:; ultivatâ€" anc a child to‘ rything f'l.'lr & more hea ith paâ€" p o \‘zlte. it St)ez id sick goir 11 ever | CAM: d the | fulf ory in | Pro ither with have very 8 111 manâ€" ill of ladâ€" a partner )r the unâ€" 27 CEACC PCO M UUC UZ sight. _ People know the oak‘s there somewhere but they don‘t think tha he amounts to much. Don‘t mistake seuan o CRP oc n ts â€" PR T lt o Pn raiP e ldisdanies actvihss l "Well, so do I. The oak furnishes the support and the ivy simply clings and gets more and more conspicuous till she leaves" the oak clear out _ of sight. _ People know the oak‘s ther» ‘"Henrietta," said you believe in all â€" woman‘s being an band‘s being the o clings 2 "Certainly; in so YoungYFarmer Said to Have Met Foul Play at Cookstown. The Attorneyâ€"General‘s Department has been notified from Cookstown of the disappearance of John Eldridge, a young married farmer, living near Churchill. _ With his wife and three children he visited the fair last Thursâ€" day, and after taking tea with his family went for his horses. Not reâ€" turning when expected, his friends went to the stable, located in a lonely spot, but found Eldridge had not been there, his overcoat being still in the buggy. All that night search was proâ€" secuted without result. Relatives have made inquiry since then without sucâ€" cess. Eldridge had $100 rent money, which he displayed on the fair grounds when buying candies for his children. His wife fears foul play. lay 11 inches.‘ No asked." MYSTERIOUS piIs xo : Bs sn dal oys 0 on CC emen, XOUE, AESULOET mw-[ tom we shall now be glad to hear The QHSEHONS,that, the Tecturer may | talking.‘ At this a tall, mt]-lm;niedi man rose in the audience, and with a rasping voice, said: ‘I would like to ask the lecturer the exact height of the BriGal Veil.‘ Bromley, who had experted nothing of this kind, :mdl was never‘strong in figures, was enâ€" tirely taken by surprise, but gave no sign thereof as he rose and advanced to the front of the platform and coolly answered : ‘I did not measure | them, but as nearly as I can rememâ€" |bex' the Sxa(;t height is 361 feet 04 ’ nalhas + t _ o BBR t it , Henrietta; I‘m not com t it does seem hard luck." in The The 2 °_ "~B"ganco with our usual tom we shall now be glad to kuvver! sedusceda d is nc ui octs. 1 l« W "Wh thou do n tlae Htesn2 00001 CvimdC 08e LNAt 1 would put a little extra gilt on their walks and a little extra embroidery on their slippers, "But," . you say, ‘"Why does not God give us all these things?‘ An:! I bethink to myself, He is wiser, It would make fools and sluggards of us if we had our way. No man puts his best picture in the porâ€" tico or vestibule of his house. God meant this world to be only the vestiâ€" bule of heaven, that great gallery of the universe toward which we are asâ€" piring. We must not have it too good in this world, or we would want no heaven, Polycarp was contented to be burnâ€" ed to death." The atams ...,_ _ ">, oUrt tead of consuming oing to be a wall and amethysts, "Not each one of us each one of you. â€" "B mies?" _ Yeg, The or would make with tha. the setting hall in you statuettes, the four q in all their you should knives of g and amethv LECTURER KEPT n the conflic sSkirmish, |s expend my io t on ig, pp _ JTat region at certair Seasons, The earth had been strewe, with the Carcasses of men Slain by in. brepared for the great troubles of lt« i$ to conquer these small troubles What would you say of a soldier: who "efused to 1080 "his "guy ‘,,, . ""er"wh 0 ODGRSaron® + o L cq oo cmd flles that in Seasons. Tp with the car brepared" for m thou walkest shalt not be bur t understand, but fter. In heaven ven for the horn a gi~, 5 __‘"4 Wealth, Th 0f a sixpenny nail sometimes lockjaw, and the clip of a | finitesimal annoyance may da; forever, Do not let any annc berplexity come acrogs your s Out its making you better, A returned missionary told & company of adventurers rc the Ganges were stung to ¢ flles that infest thnaw .. * ," h: _ of blessing. God j to you the .blessings es, as He did to thou walkest throus Oak and Ivory. im c Fope C CSorce â€" XUpPDeG in tting sun. 1 would have every _your house set with statues and tes, and then I would have uUr quarters of the globe pour their luxuries on your table, and lould have forks of silver and of gold, inlaid with diamonds nethvate â€" _ Gu" 2 oul ICEL [)% further questions _ were oly }y O ;n men, if you canâ€" ly the principles â€" of Christ‘s _ on a small scale you will never _ to_apply them on a larger If I had my way with you, I have Xram t W SE sys F said, Mr. Meekton, "do all this talk about a an ivy and her husâ€" ie oak to whom â€" she uWls n wC L ke with them would be that ut a little extra gilt on their 1 a little extra embroidery slippers, "But," . you say, s hnvot God give us all these A Ne q 9 ET "nny* . "3 " WV see how courâ€" am and what battling I will @ general would say to such a you are not faithful in a you would be nothing in a ngagement,‘" And I have to O Christian mMen. if van asw P MPotinstih, dA c 9k ve you possess all possible rosperity. I would have you 4& garden, a river flowing t, geraniums and shrubs on and the grass and flowers as as though the rainbow had would have you a house, a lansion, and the beds should 1 with uphoistery dipped in x ann . PcDoe ho 2 some respects." Rayis couei d t i d hy of adventurers Fes were stung \to {nfest that region The earth had be, Carcasses of man . you. "Not to y The only diffe APPEARANCE. ouch him. ‘Well, my to understand that : flames of trial, inâ€" your soul, are only 1 of defense and a . God is going to blessings and the did to Polycarp. st through the fire, burned." _ Now you but you shall know ven you will bless qag_xp]alning, HIS NERVE. nted to be burnâ€" ake was planted. it. The fagots him, the fires tells us that the great & you say. Yes, Y told me ~Imes produces of a most in. 1ay damage you y annoyance or your soul with. PTJ your eneâ€" ‘erence _T soldierï¬â€˜;\-'};a to go into rowing up deathA by certain streweqd i _by inâ€" $ _of ‘nre The journey. Their pathway _ lay mostly through desert wilds. Bands of â€" robbers _ and murderers infested the way, and the time lengthened to four months before the pilgrims were within their beloved city. Their progress must be slow, for their company was not made up of trainâ€" the care _ and keeping of God, he was prudent in the arrangements for the journey. He laid responsibi]â€" ity upon men and whom God had apâ€" pointed to special service. He was very accurate in his dealings, allowâ€" ing no lack of importance to be placed upon sacred duties. When men {ee! their responsibility in carrying on the work of God, they will" the more diligently endeavor to measure up to all that is required of them. The gold and silver vessels were more sacred since they were to go into the house of God, ' Heart preparation. Ezra was placed in difficult cireumstances, He had to '('ontend with the scorn and opposiâ€" ’ tion of pagans and with the corrupâ€" | tions of his own people. But his heart ‘ was moved by the Lord. The condition | of affairs of both Babylon, where he | lived, and in Judea stirred his soul. | He was but a young man of twentyâ€" five when the King Xerxes, by Haâ€" man‘s subtilty, issued the decree orâ€" dering the Jews to be s‘ain. But God‘s providential care over His peoâ€" pe at that time was a strong indiâ€" cation to one interested in the prosâ€" perity of God‘s people that God had better things in store for His chilâ€" dren. In Babylon they were captives, though they had homes of their own. They were in touch with idolaters, and under the rule of a pagan king. If they would be.a blessing to their brethren in Jerusalem they must set their hearts upon being loyal â€" serâ€" vants of God and engage in His worâ€" ship only. Unless they were separatâ€" ed unto God they wou!‘d be unable to lead their faltering, compromising brethren into a better life,. Guarded trea.s'ui'és-.h‘rvl'l'ifé'l-:zra comâ€" mitted himsel(:md all with him to RETTD 200_â€" eCR CSICIt~â€"â€" 1 C | dangerous journey â€" was completed _| with safety at the end of four mqnths, ; Abode three daysâ€"That is, they restâ€" | ed that long. On the fourth day the | treasures â€" woere we‘ghed and handed | over to the eustody of the officlating | priests of the temple. The returned ! exiles _ offered burntâ€"offerings, â€" and Ezra delivered the royal â€"comm{ssion | to the Magistrates, while the Levitâ€" | feal portion of the company assisted | in performing the â€"additional work | which the arrival of so many new " worshippers occasioned.â€"J., F. & D.‘ Teachings â€" We should earnestly / pray that God will watech over and | protect us and all our interests. When we have asked God to take care of ' us we should be careful that we do our part in being watechfal. We shail be called to give account of the way we. 2Pr0YE, 49B APREUREY dafe, unicss we are kept by the Lord. PRACTICAL SURVEYy. that w0 Clre Of it to proper men, though without God they would have watch. ed in vain. Our prayers should always be seconded with our endeavors. _ Do we expect God should by His proviâ€" !den(*e keep that â€" which belongs to us? Then ought we by His grace to J(raro for that which belongs to Him. | _ 27. Vessels of fine copperâ€"Probably some factitious â€" metal made â€" there that took the polish and assumed the ’hrightnes‘s of gold, and because _ of its hardness was more durable. There is still a factitious metal of this kind made among the Asiaties. It requires much art in making, but the constituâ€" ent materials are of small value. #1. We departed on the twelfth day â€"The company began to form and Arâ€". range for the journey upon the Iirst day of the month. Upon a review of his company Ezra observed the lack of Levites, and the time used in sw-ur-l ing their union with the returning ex‘les, and in weighing the treasures, etc., took up the time until the twelfth day. Alava is the name both of a town and small stream, not far from the River Euphrates. This would be a natural course to pursue from Sh..â€" shan. ) 41 °e 5 o ANVCd LPWelvÂ¥e â€"Apnnointed to the special duty of being custodâ€" lans of the sacred vessels.â€"Bib. Mus, We have here the particular â€" care Ezra took of the treasure of God‘s sanctuary, Having committed the keeping of it to God, he committed the care of it to proper men, though without God they would have watch. ed in vain. Our prayers should always be seconded with our endeavors. _ Do we expect God should by His proviâ€" dence keep that wwrhibnh.s Funlrat css‘ 4e sc 1 W 0 CX2CECTOR PUTUELS and he would not dishonor God by asking the usual military escort. He had represented Goa, the object _ of his worship, as supremely powerful, and as having â€" the strongest affec. tion for his true followare ‘"*~ was ruining and degeading the nation. _ ‘To seek of him a right way for usâ€"That is, to commit theimselves to the guidance and protection of diâ€" vine Providence and implore Him to give them a prosperous journey. Their Journey lay chiefly through the deâ€" sert, and the Arabians and Samariâ€" tans were likely to attack theame. 22. I was ashamed to require......a band of soldiersâ€"Ezra had preached trust in God before the heathen rulers and he would nag apg _ [ 27CRH uic uit 2CODUROMIE COT wira was the albolishment of mixed marriages with the surrounding heathen. _ The course of the Israelâ€" ites was ruining and degeading the nation. _ ‘To seek of him a right way for usâ€"That i8, 10 Commit #nnemens _ n 1 . YAang : 53 _‘ C. 408, seventeen _ years alter â€" the compleâ€" tion of the temple. He was about 25 years old when the nint naf Haman him 40â€"~years old when he went to Jerusaleom to reâ€"enforce, renew â€" and reform the feeble nation at Jerusalem. seventyâ€"ecight years passed between the permit of Cyrus for the Jews to return to Jerusalem and the grant ol Artaxerxes to Ezra. In the first company 50,000 returned, and in the second 7,000, The first company went to build the temple and set up true worship. The second _ comâ€" pany went to establish reform, 21. I proclaimed a fast thereâ€"Ezra entered upon his work with fasting and prayer. _ The Journey was a dangerous one, especially â€" with All the treasure he carried. â€" Ezra â€"reâ€" Alizarl «hss q2 ! EESTET MV CeLT alized the danger, h ward in faith. â€" The Ezra was tha ahealll "~NOC.~â€"~IL C. 458, Place.â€"F rom shan to Jerusalem, Persons.â€"Ezra, Priecsts. Le Jews, Commentury.â€"(:unnecting Links lesson fopr toâ€"day dates about teen years later than the last son, making the Journey of Ezra gin B. C, 458, in March, and en the next July. _ Four months ; passed in making the Journey Jerusalom, Ezra was born B. (, SCYEnIOCN vaars afr..l * We â€"came 1 O 1" weghnng the treasures, k up the time until the twelfth Aliava is the name both of a nd small stream, not far from ver Euphrates. This would be eX AC CSR ; ime â€" to Jerusalemâ€"The journey â€" was completed it the end of four mqnths, daysâ€"That is, they restâ€" â€" On the fourth day the ere we‘ghed and handed 2°C P9YaAlâ€" comm‘:ssion ‘ates, while the Levitâ€" the company assistcda the _ additional â€" work God, the object â€" of supremely powerful, the strongest affec. followers. Upon a review of observed the lack time used in seeurâ€" nonld _ earnestly watch over and ‘ interests. When to take care of t ne went forâ€" ('hie( reform of o0 require......a had preached heathen rulers "Billy, safd Sandy Pikes ‘if yer had yer_choice of dis ‘less bu iness what wud it be? A horseless c ‘rlage or a chainless bike?" " Needer ; ‘twud be an endleas meal," Few people, who have not actualiy run a blast furnace, re«lize what i+ means to fill the capac ous maw of one of these monsters. A stock of 200 tons daily capacity, ronning on ~" per cent. ore, must have delivered to it each day something more than 100 tons of ore, 250 to : 39) tons of coke, and over 100 tons of limestone, besides sand, coal and n nor supplies â€"say 900 tons raw maserials. Add the 200 tons of pig iron product ship ped out, and we have a Cally freight movement of 1,100 tons taking â€" no note of the disposition of the slag The mining of the ore requires the labor of 150 to 300 men ; the coal mining, coke making, quarrying . of limestone â€" and transpo tations, at least 300 more. The furn e itself em. gloys about 150 or more }â€" ainds. Start.â€" ig up a furnace of ord uary capacâ€" ity, therefore, calls imm., liately â€" for the use of at least a t} nsand railâ€" way cars, and many locomotives ; for perhaps several steamer: and vesâ€" sels on the lakes; for cavital, from the mines to the pig irc=, of one to two millions of dollars, a d last, but not least, for a high orde© of managâ€" Ing ability. â€" Archer Br »wn, in the Engineering Magazine fo> October. What it Means to Start ~ mafiu, waÂ¥ a% tThe Kosgn House, ‘Toâ€" ronto, yesterday. In the course of conâ€" versation Mr. Colter stated that a ro. cent rumor as to the third marriago of Mrs. Sternaman, who a year and a half ago was tried and acquitted on a charge that embraced the poisâ€"â€" oning of two husbands, was untrue To avoid unpleasant notoriety Mrs. Sternaman some time ago adopted the name of Chipman, which was that of her first husband, and the roâ€" port thereby arose in Buffalo that she had married a brother of his who is also living in Buffalo. The reâ€" port, however, has proved to be withâ€" out foundation, and the woman is said to be earning her livelihood as a seamstress in that city. America is an infidel, or, what is the sime thing, a Protestant nation. Sec the danger of I‘ghting mother church. An infide! nation has sent the flower of its men here, and behold them. Your lots may be hard. You have had grievâ€" ances in the past. We may have &‘nned, but your state is certainly betâ€" ter than that of Americans. You are moral. You are religious." . Just as long as these priests have 45,000 Amerâ€" icans there, and such Americans, as samples of what they are pleased to call infidel civilization, so long is it useless for Protestants to try to conâ€" vyert Tagalogs and other Filipinos. Let the army do its work and get away. Then, and not till then, will Methodâ€" ists, Presbyterians and Episcopalians stand any chance." Mrs. Sternaman Now Goes â€" Title of Mrs, Chipman. who are active as they â€"never wer before. Everywhere they are preach Ing to the people this : " Behold thes men. They are a sample of Amopricans America is an infide!, or, what is the * When the insurrection was its height many Spanish priests â€" driven out and left the island. the coming of the Americans, a . mon danger has brought Tagalog« Spaniards together, and old & have been healed. Toâ€"day not Luzon, but the islands to the | and south, are "When the American troops lancâ€" ed in Manila there was only al saloon or two in the whole place, Toâ€"day Manila is a hell hote, ‘There are 430 or more saloons, typical places of the western frontier, or worse, and the saloons are more respectable than are many of the other places within the rity, which Americans have _ cither planted or kept alive by their supâ€" port. ed in Manila there ;\l;us only or two in the whole place, Manila is & hOell hinla ‘Piheams "The United States and* around Manila a or had when‘ I left a 45,000 drunkards, ral blers. _ Of course there but they are not wor The statement is suf ate, HAS CHANGED HER NA ME most religious ‘ th(‘}' are mere govern themsel in my judgment to abund m tha New York report: Mr the Brotherhood of St, A fmfl'&wwm.nnd" man of the Board of D Foreign Missions ol the Episcopal Church, chargi examine cond‘tions and re to report at the Mission which will maakt +hia .. | New _ York Missionary on | 2 Army Misbehavior, [ THE CATHOLIC FRikks arriur |*# CcovERED wIPH FRIARS s together, and old sores n healed. _ Toâ€"day not only ut the islands to the woest Inkards, rakes and gam course there are exceptions ire not worth mentioning ment is sufficiently accur 3 _ jtilll power gone, : 4@ mot let them do so. present time there is f Prqtestant effort. It °C aAmencans, a comâ€" brought Tagalogs and Spanish priests wer Vates troops has in la at this moment, {t a few weeks Ao, pJ Blast Furnace Americans, as are pleased to so long is it to try to conâ€" FRIARS Active soes by the * Mr' Peywnr of St. Andrew, went With | °7 7~~ imormed that a cot made | of brimstone, with a mattress lined with ‘ive coals that never burned out, | was awaiting him in the event of his | dying impenitent. According to reâ€" ferences in the sermon to the people, there must have been a large number present. In fact, in those days, when prize fights, horse races and even smoking of tobacco were held to be sinfui, seeing a murderer off on his mst journey was about the only sporting event of the times, and the people flocked out in large numbers to see the trap sprung and the victim drop. . This sermon was printed by Kneeâ€" land &:. Adaqu.. of Boston, and the C P Oy . 6 "2 Coatey Arend . Ks exact date of its delivery was Oct., 20th, 1768. The pastor of the O‘d South Church was evidently an exâ€" pert at this sort of preaching, for he was in great demand, and there are the bodies of murderers buried in the Green Hill district, one of them a woâ€" man, to whom he preached in the open a{r l!: WMer toward the close of re hâ€" at Rev. Thaddeus was a great painter with words, and to the unfortuna te Arthur he pictured the nether wor d with olxiâ€"fsshioned colors. To read the sermon even at thisâ€" day, one with a powerfu imagination can almost sniff the brimstone and can rea‘lize how Arthur mus: have fe t as he sat there with the whole of Worcester county occupying the pews. Arthur probably wasn‘t ticked to any great extent. He was informed that a cot made of brimstone, with a mattress lined with ‘ive coals that never burned out, was awaltino him in tha munue aq aat who was preached to with a rope around his neck and a grave dug within sight, but in the sermon he is referred to as Arthur, or more speciâ€" fically, and with a view to giving Arâ€" thur a tip that there was no sip of tll:e n?ose in his case, "The Dying Arâ€" thur.‘ | _ Henry M. Clemence, the a uctioneer, in the course of his business dea .ings with _ men throughout â€" Worcester county, comes into possession of many | pecu.dar prints, but he possesses none | thit he prizes more than a copy of _ a_sermon delivered by Rev. Thaddeus Maccarty, the revolutionary pastor of the Ol South Church, to a negro about to be hanged for a heinous crime. In the anteâ€"revoutionary days bWastor yreach him a spiritua} sendâ€" off. This sermon was delivered in the year 1768, long before the Bostonese took it into their heads to sever dipâ€" lomatic relations between the Ameriâ€" can colonies and their Uncle George, the English king. This particular colored man was apâ€" prebended, tried and sentenced to be hanged by the neck. History does not give the fu‘l name of the enlonrnd mss How a m PREACZEBD sRIMS TONE SERMON country. If a Kaffin ing built his name the subscribers. He g everything. While h they are overshadow tues.â€"Chicago Pritich. t] Ribekk Cape nHOJOS _ charge. that th« popular Transva; when 1 from the lishmen ‘red nec heard daily in a are positively in eigners. The you English in Gress every breath. drinkers, â€" which with the older ( " Of course, Ce of the Jameson â€" in South Africa one wh of the "What can I . the Boers? We not the worst p am talking now the press of th« printed even a !i: ings and the grie ers I wou‘ld not subject. mt to lled a victorious after the Boers wil tillery and rough cou: fighter, b a fighting repetition 80‘s. «lgion are on! Dutch republ ENCY mAE AREC C nopoly, _ In &uawayo"dynaniw can bebom:htforsmle-pertonthm in Johannesburg, and every pound of dynamite in Bulawayo has to hbe transported by oxâ€"wagons 1,400 miles farther into the interior than Johannesburg. That llustrates _ one monopoly legislated by the 30 farmâ€" ers. When a pollâ€"tax is sevied burghâ€" ers are quietly allowed to escape payâ€" ment while the outlanders are forced to pay the tax, " And this Irish brigade that is to fight against the Brglish! It is alt bosh. Tell the antiâ€"English Irishâ€"Amâ€" ericans who want to fight with the Boers that a Roman Catholic is no better in th» Transvaa. than a Hottenâ€" tot. A Roman Catholic, no â€" matter what nationality, cannot hold the meanest public of{ice in the governâ€" ment service ; he cannot even serve on the police forc:, Peon‘s of thak w TORONTO est grievance is the nopoly. â€" In Bulawnas wiaich were { ramed olly to ma I;'- money for the farmers? 1 think not." _ Thus spoke a South Africa banker now in Chicazgo, and whoge name is withheld, *h "FiniTaal is misgoverned. It has always been missoverned by the Boekr: Laws are made to fill _ the ts of e burghers. The greatâ€" z rflnv-;n::l;l Thatore‘sâ€" !‘B l'l grea "Chicago would have 24 hours were it gove Transvaal. Would you erned by 30 farmers» submit to taxation wit tation 2 0 / YEHRWIE] Anaaes .omk. W Hay Visiting South African Banker on the Transvaal, GIVES H1s OPINION As to war. century.â€"Worecester, Mass Col« Massachusetts Minister Criminals a Sendâ€"Of . iti] "2° umiy allowed to republic, nothing 0k for British tro:« ous into Pretoria the declaration _ o wil never stand be and cavalry of the country the Boer t _ you has . Booers ‘red 1 mal CCC C $1Vves money to & While ho has fau)ts, overshadowed by his vip. 1g0 Britishâ€" American. as experienced the manners ers? They call ail Engâ€" ed necks,‘ and the term is y in all Boer towns. They vely insuiting to all forâ€" he young â€" Boers ape the dress and curse them with ith. They are also heavy which is not a custom older generation. 2pe Dut mor it in the o man. This w of the wn we.i, of course they a rst people on earth,. but thisâ€"day, one with a ation can almost sniff and can realize how ve fe * as he sat there of Worcester coun ty ews. Arthur probably to any great extent. emence, the auctioneer, of his business dea .ings throughout Worcester into possession of many > taxation without “'Ollld von liva WAas cvored man was apâ€" and sentenced to be ck. History does not e of the colored man d to with a rope and a grave dug vas unvelled, a pre. Town from the soâ€" h Cecil Rhodes. There _liberal man in the Kaffir church is he. ame appears among IHG gives money to for the other side. If e United States had ittle of the Boers‘ failâ€" evances of the outlandâ€" o have talked on the i1 Rhodes w raid. Every the open 11 * Wienout represon. you live under laws @d only to make money ‘ I think not." Thus Africa banker now in spoken with any Mmar in ivered in the he Bostonese to sever dipâ€" 1 the Ameriâ€" Incle George, ave a civil war in governed jike the your city be govâ€" nglish Irishâ€"Am»â€" ) fight with the i Catholic is no . than a Hottenâ€" wic, no matter innot â€" hold the not copl« 1 to #°s Wus Dack very resident dynamite â€" moâ€" ops to march three weeks i war. The efore the arâ€" > English. In is a good he fails as wi.l not be a n the early Would Chic even serve ) of that reâ€" live in the more. ition Gave Dayue@ * of Ne ago ts F