tun! temeo person with h consump- understand. Is will cure i in in first y of moo. It in only rd that m I the" as ted and Nb need. retried}. t r food I“ m 11â€.. tfrai " t fresh lit. I and drink not forget lion in the horoughly ighcst en- ledies for {lungs and (its stages. "ohot r3321“ may " CO. T=CCCC5 SW is; ES. mes 9 1899 mes tt Mr Wain“. tim W But hark to the buzz of wheels in the distance'. The farmer has taken his throne on .n. reaper. He once walked; now he rides: once worked with arm of flesh, now with rod ot Iron. He starts at the end of the wheat field. heads his horses to the opposite end of the tleld, then rides on. At the stroke of his iron chariot the gold of the grain is surrendered. the machine rolling this way and rolling that, this way and that. until the work, which would have been ac- complished in many days. is accom- plished in a few hours. the grain tteid prostrate before the harvesters. Can you imagine anything more beautiful than the sea island cotton? I take up the unmelted snow in my hand. How beautiful it is.' But do you know by what painstaking and tedious toil it passed into anything like prnetietuity'.' " you examined that cotton you would tind it full of Secondly. I look into the agricul- tural world to see what the wheel has accomplished. Look at the stalks of wheat and oats. the one bread for man, the other bread for horses. Coat ott and with a cradle made out of five or sir: fingers of wood and one ot sharp steel, the harvester went across the field. stroke after stroke, perspira- tion rolling down forehead and cheek and chest, head blistered by the con- suming sun and lip parched by the consuming August air, at noon the workmen lying half dead under the trees. One of my most painful boy- hood memories is that of my father in harvest time reeling from exhaus- tion over the doorstep. too tired to Pat, pale and fainting as he sat down. The grain brought to the barn. the sheaves were unbound and spread on a threshing floor. and two men with nails stood opposite each other, hour after hour and day after day, pound- ing the wheat out of the stalk. Two strokes and then a cessation of sound. Thump. thump. thump. thump, thump, thump.' Pounded once. and then turned over to be pounded again. slow. very slow. The hens cackled and ducked by the door and picked up the loose grains and the horses half asleep and dosing over the man- gers where the hay had been. A Slain by the sword. we buried the hero with Dead March in Saul. and tlags at halt mast. Slain by the needle. no one Anew it but the house- hold that watched her health giving way. The winter after that the (-hlldron were ragged and cold and hungry or in the almshouse. The hand that wielded the needle had for- gotien its cunning. Soul and body had parted at the seam. The thimble had dropped from the palsled ttntrer. The thread of life had snapped and let a suffering human lite drop into the graVe. The spool was all un- wound. Her Sepulcher was digged, not with sexton's spade, but with a. sharper and shorter instrument-a nvwllv. woman's life and added immeasur- able advantages. The needle for age: had punctured the eyes and pierced the eyes and made terrible man- sacre. To prepare the garments of a whole household in the spring for summer and in the autumn for win- ter was an exhausting process. "Stitch, stitch, stitch!" Thomas Hood not it to poetry, but millions of per- sons have found it agonlsing prose. wrought revolution. Behold the sew- ing machine. It has shattered the housew.itcir, bondage and prolonged battle. Methinks it wlll be a. health- ful change if this thanksgiving week, In church and homestead. we celebrate the victories ot peace, tor nothing was we enter upon it? and a halt this n bratintr the alum] and battery. We airs and cheered Sounded the ream Washington. D.C., Dee. 3.-Tho dil- course by pr. Talmage is a. sermon of preparation tor the national observ- ance of this week and in an unusual way calls for the gratitude of the people. The text, Ezekiel x, 13: "As for the wheels, it was cried unto them in my hearing, o wheel." Next Thursday will, by proclama- tlon ot president and governors, be observed in thanksgiving for tempor- al mercies. With jhat spirit shall nter upon it? For nearly a. year a halt this nation has been cele- ng the triumph of sword and gun battery. We have sung martial and cheered returning heroes and Iied the requiem for the slain in rnq1 \Vhile the world has been rolling on the eight wheels of the rail car or the four wheels of the carriage or the two wheels of the gig it was not until 1876, at the Centennial exposition, at Phila- delphia, that the miracle ot the nine- teenth century rolled in--the bicycle. The world could not believe its own eyes, and not until quite tar on in the eighties were the continents enchant- ed with the whirling, tiatthintr, domi- nating spectacle oof a machine that was to do so much for the pleasure, the business, the health and the profit of nations. The world had needed it for 6,000 years. Man's slowness ot lo- comotion was a mystery. Was it of more importance that the reindeer or the eagle rapidly exchanged jungle: or off the track would be the difference between a hundred men living and a. hundred dead, full head of steam and two men in the locomotive charged with all the responsibility of whistle and Westinghouse brake. Clank.' clank! echo the rocks. Small villages only hear the thunder and see the whirlwind as the train shoots past, a city on the wing. Thrilling, startling. sublime, magnificent tspectacle-a rail train in lightning procession. See the train shove out of one of our great depots tor a thousand mile journey! All aboard! Tickets clipped and baggage checked and porters at- tentive to every want. under tunnels dripping with dampness that never aw the light, along ledges where an inch It was the event of the day when the stage came. It was our highest ambition to become a. stage driver. Some of the boys climbed on the great leathern hoot of the stage, and those of us who could not get on shouted "Cut behind.'" I saw the old stage driver not long ago and I expressed to him my surprise that one around whose head I had seen a halo ot glory in my boyhood time was only a man like the rest ot us. Between Sanderson's stage-coach and a Chicago express train what a difference, all the great cities ot the nation strung on.an iron thread of railways'. While this has been dolng on the water James W'att's wheel has done so much on the land. How well I re- member Sanderson'a tstage-coach, run- ning from New Brunswick to Easton, as he drove through Somerville, N.J., turning up to the postoftice and drop- ping the mail bags with ten letters and two or three newspapers, Sanderson himself on the box, SIX feet two Inches and well proportioned, long lash whip in his hand, the reins of slx horses in the other, the “leaders" lathered along' the lines of the traces, foam dripping from the bits'. What a. difference between John Fitch's steamboat, sixty feet long, and the Oceanic, 704 feet long'. The ocean wheel turns swifter and swifter, filling up the distance between the hemls- pheres and hastening the time spoken of in the Book of Revelation when there shall be no more Bea. . Surely John Fitch was in a bad pre- dicament. If the steamboat boiler did not blow him up, his wife would. In all ages there are those to prophesy the failure ot any useful invention. You do not know what the inventors of the day Butter. When it was pro- posed to light London with gas, Sir Humphrey Davy, the great philosoph- er, said that he should as soon think of cutting a slice from the moon and setting it uporfa pole to light the city. Through all abuse and caricature Fitch and Fulton went until yonder the wheel is in motion, and the Cler- mont, the first steamboat, is going up the North river, running the distance -hold your breath while I tell You-- front New York in thirty-two hours. But the steamboat wheel multiplied its velocities until the Lucania, of the Cunard, and the Majestic, of the White Star line, and the Kaiser Wilhelm, of the North German Lloyd line, cross the Atlantic ocean in six days or less, communication between the two coun- tries so rapid and so constant that whereas once those who had been to' Europe took on airs for the‘rest of their mortal lives-and for me for many years the most disagreeable man 1 could meet was the man who had been to Europe, despising all American pictures and American music and American society because they had Been European pictures, and heard European music and mingled in European 'society-now a trans-At- lantic voyage is so common that a sen- sible man could no more boast of it than if he had been to New York or Boston. rd the former and quit in season, and had I been in my right senses I should undoubtedly have treated the latter in the same manner; but, for one man to be teased with both, he must be looked upon as the most unfortunate man in the world. ot nothing so perplexing and vexatloua to a man of feeling as a turbulent wife atyi_stearnboat building. I experiene, I will not enter into the controversy as to whether John Fitch or Robert Fulton or Thomas Somerset was the inventor of the steamboat. They all Buttered and were martyrs ot the wheel, and they shall be honored. John Fitch wrote: Jan. 21, 1873, was the fatal time of bringing me into existence. I know Then I see coming forth from this cotton production and cotton manu- far-ture enough cloth to cover the tables of a nation, and enough spool thread to sew every rent garment, and enough hosiery to warm the na- tion's feet, and enough cordage to fly the sails of all the shipping. and enough wadding to supply the guns of all the American sportsmen. Thirdly. I look to see what the while?! has done for the traveling world. o one can tell how many noble and self- sacrificing Inventors have been crush- ed between the coach wheel and the modern locomotive, between the pad- dle and the ocean steamer. lag a whole day to prepare a pound ot cotton for the market now he may prepare three hundred weight, and the south is enriched, and the com- merce of the world ls revolutionised, and over 8,000,000 bales of cotton were prepared this year, enough to keep at work in this country 14,300,000 spin- dles, employing 270,000 hands and en- listing $281,400,000 of capital. Teeth on cylinders, brushes on cy- linders, wheels on wheels. South Carolina gave him $50,000 tor his In- yention. and instead of one man tak- was all that a man con prepare in one day, but Eli 's"viit',t, a Manu- ohusetts Yankee, woke up, Bot a handful ot cotton, and went to con- structing a wheel tor the parting of the fiber and the seed. seeds. It was a severe process by which the seed was to be extracted from the fiber. Vast populations were leaving the south because they could not make any living out of this pro- duct. One pound of green seed cotton .tWA" tt Arthur Cardinal. of Ottawa, a. convict in the Central Prison, Fete terday afternoon went to the cell ot John Hughes, " young lad trom Lindsay. with a large bread knife and stabbed the lad eight times in 2t head and body. He will likely Gen. Wheeler says: "There are more than twenty different tribes in Luton, and very few of them would submit to Aguinaldo's rule." Sterkstroom in Cape Colony has no connection with the place of the same name in the Transvaal. The holy of H. A. Duman has been found in Toronto Bay. Jacobsdal isfa small village near Zeerust, while Jacobsdal is in the Orange Free State. Cape Colony boasts of two Lady Greym-one a small village 10 miles from Robertson. the other a. village near Allwal North. Langlaate, part and parcel of Johannesburg, is not to be con. founded with Elands Laagte. where the battle was fought, in Natal. Belra is a seaport town in Porta. guese East Mrica, Berea is a dig. trict of Basatoland, and Berea, again, is a suburb of Durban, Natal. Durban and Durbanvil!e are tar apart. The former is the most im- portant seaport town of Natal, the latter being a small village eighteen miles from Pure Town. _' Mafeking. of the Beehuanaland, should not be confounded. us it very often is, with Mafeteng, a district ot Baautoland. There is a. Ladysmith in Natal and " Ladismith in the Cape Col- ony. - . At different times in Europe they have tried to get a congress of kings at Berlin or at Paris or at St. Peters- burg. but it has always been a failure. Only a few kings have come. But on this imaginary platform that I have built we have a convention of all the kings-King Corn, King Cotton, King Rice. King Wheat, Icing Oats, King Iron, King Coal, King Silver. King Gold ---they all bow before the King of kings, to whom be all the glory of this year's wonderful production. Marnisburg is a village in the Crndock district of Cape Colony. while Murr'ayshurg, also in Cape :‘olony. is in the Graaf-1teinet dig. rict. Pu.vtnaster--Malor J. L. Biggar. surgeorrnMajor-C. W. Wilson. H, ur grant“; ptttimek-s1tts.r,ton-RIthJar Fisot and Major A. B. Osborne. Chaplain-mes. T. F. Fullerton. In Charge of Maxim Gun Squad-- Captain Arthur Clive Bell. And now I gather on an imaginary platform, as I literally did when I preached in Brooklyn, specimens of our American products, and it seems as if the waves of agriculture, min- ert1totrical, pomologicai wealth dash to the platform. and there are tour beautiful beings that walk in, and they are garlanded, and one is garlanded with wheat and blossoms of snow, and I find she is the north; and another comes in, and her brow is garlanded with rice and blossoms of magnolia, and I find she is the south; and another comes in, and I find she is garlanded with seaweed and blossoms of spray. and I find she is the east; and another comes in, and I tInd she is garlanded with silk of corn, and radiant with California gold, and I find she is the west, and coming face to face, they take off their garlands, and they twist them together with something that looks like a wreath, but it is a wheel, the wheel of national prosperity, and I say in an outburst of Thanksgiving Joy tor what God has done for the north and the south and the east and the west. "O wheel."' In Command-LF-Col. W. D. 0t- ter, It. R. C. I. Major lat Battalion-Lie/oi; Buchan. R. It. C. I. , iMajor 2nd Battaiioh--Colonel Pelle.. t er. . Chief Staff Orrueer--hralor Drum- mond. Adjutant-Major Charles MacDon- gall, It. It. C. I. The following is the'composition or the stuff of tlle Canadian Regiment: - ,,._ ..- ...~.. nvvl- nun ul- vention has crowded invention, and the wheel jostled wheel, stereotyping, trleetrotypititr, taking their places. Benjamin Franklin’s press giving way to the Lord Stanhope press, and the Washington press and the Vic- tory press and the Hoe perfecting press have been set up. Together with the newspapers comes the publication of innumerable books of history. of poetry. ot romance, ot art, ot travel. ot biography. of religion, dictionaries, encyclopedias and Bibles. Some of those presses send forth the most accursed stuff, but the good predominates. Torn on with wider sweep and greater ve- locity, O wheel-wheel of light, wheel of civilisation, wheel of Christianity, wheel of divine momentum! -...- “nun “It.“ unytmng that has pre- ceded. Behold the almost miraculous printing press'. Do you not feel the ground shake with the machinery of the New York, Brooklyn, Boston, Phila- delphla. Washington and western papers? Borne of us remember when the hand ink roller was run over'the cylinder and by great haste 800 copies ot the village newspaper were issued in one day and no lives lost. But in- - ,_. - -... .uv-c “LUUIIUCU this than with anything that has ceded. Behold the almost miraci printing press'. Do you not feel ground shake with the machiner: the New York. Brnnklvn 11mm- TI - ,_â€"â€"_ -.- - use-Jun: - own“- ly from place to place? Was the busi- ness of the bird or the roebuck more urgent than that of the inoarnated tm.. mortal? No. At last we have the obliteration of distance by pneumatic tire. At last we have wings. And what has this invention done for wo- men? The cynics and constitutional growlers would deny her this emanci- Patton and say, "What better exercise can she have than a broom or a duster or a churn or rocking a cradle or run- ning up and down stairs or a walk to church with a prayer-book under her arm?" And they rather rejoice to tind her disabled with broken pedal or l punctured tire half way out to Chevy Chase or Coney island. But all sensible people who know the tonic or fresh air and the health in deep respiration and the awakening of disused muscles and the exhilaration ot velocity will re-l Jolce that wife and mother and daughter may have this new recrea-r tion. Indeed life to so many is so hard a grind that I am glad at the arrival ot any new mode of health- ful recreation. We need have no anxiety about this invasion of the world’s stupidity by the vivacious' and laughing and Jubilant wheel, except that we always want it to roll in the right direction. towards place of business, towards good re- creation. towards philanthropy. to- wards usefulness, towards places of divine worship, and never towards lm- morality or Sabbath desecration. Fourthly. I look into the literary world and Bee what the wheel has ac- complished. I am more astounded with old" up“. -- ... -- Quartermaster-Major Denison, It. It. Iany: Pte that any {hogld get. twitt- War Points to Remember. our Boys in the Transvaal. if: 'e to so many ia so tat I am glad at the new mode ot health- We need have no his invasion ot the y by. the vivacious way out or Coney people who air and the An indignant eXpostulution. Curlew. son opens with words which tell of the grieved heart of a Father who has bestowed liberally the best gifts upon n. son, and made him the star among all others, and yet he is by this son dishonored, ignored, blas- phemed and robbed'. Thus are the people of Israel said to have treated God. The prophet lays truths plainly before the Jews, not sparing their feelings or heeding their excuses. From the time of the return from captivity there had been a constant tendency to degeneracy. 12. All nations shall mil youbless- od-Happy. Flo great will be your. prosperity and happiness that the fame thereof will extend to all na- tions, as in Solomon's time. A de. lightsomc land-Your country will again be known as the pleasant land, as it was formerly called.-Beuson. Teachings-lt is a great sin to make a mock of serving God. He is the worst thief who robs God. Avar- ice in the heart dries up the foun- tain ot love. To the obedient God's blessings are as the rain drops tor plenty. What God can do for us far outreaches what we can do for our- selves. Disobedience calls forth the devourer. Return to duty is the security against the devourer. When God blesses a nation all men observe its richness. (11. I will twbukc-Prevont from com- ing. The devourer--The mounts. the canker-worms, the caterpillars, and all other destructive insects-Ben, son. For your sakes-ltecause of my love for you, and for the. sake of Four prosperity. The devourer had been sent because ot their sins,but should be stayed as a reward for their re- turn to duty. 10. Bring ye all the tithes-3Lake good your solemn engagement with Nehemiah. Nah. x. 29. Into the store- house-The chambers which surround- ed the temple on three sides. These had been so empty that in Neherninh's absence one of them had been fitted up for the abode of the heathen Tobiah. That, there may be meat-- That there may be provision for the daily sacrifices, and for the main- tenance of my ministers, the priests and Levites who attend upon the ser- vice of my temple.--Benson. And prove Me-Take Go; at His word. Your war, at best, has been a failure. Windows of Heaven-A poetical, pro- verbial expression, signifying a great down pouring. Pour out a blesarng-- "lihntrry out," as if God meant that He would enmity forth His vast reser- voir of blesshtgs.-Cowles. There is here evidently allusion to copious rain; and it is imlplied that the land had been suffering from! a severe drought: _ -- B: 8. Will a men rob God t--Saerr, lege is the highest of crimes. And the {most guilty is that done by those claiming to be God's peop1e.--Harlbut. Ye have-This evil is not only the guilt of priests, hutfnf the whole nation. Wherein-To do wrong and have no conscience about it, is almost to get beyond hope-Wakefield. Tithes -Deut. xviii. 4. The tithe was "the tenth" of the inrrease of their pro- party, the produce of their orchards, vineyards, flocks, herds, and all their grains. 9. Ye ar-rsed--With famine and scarcity. God had thus punished them for neglecting to build the temple (Hag. i. lo, ll) ; now, for not. maintain- ing the temple service-Corn. Cum. 11. My name shall be great-at the Jews tound no joy in the service of God. but neglected it, or sought only selfish train by it, God would here notify them that He would raise up people who should honor and magnify Ilia name in the earth. The Gentiles .-All other nations, and considered by the Jews as not included in the tam)- ily of God. Incense shall be offered .--True praise. Jo. Shut the doors for nought-lt is plain that general avarice prevails and is practiced among you; for even the officers or ministers whose duty it is to open and shut the doors of the temple, and to kindle fire on the altar, will not perform: their office without making a gain of it or re- ceiving fees for it. o. Beseech God-Ae the national In- tercessors. 8upptieate God to pardon the nation as well as yourselves for what offences have been committed against His laws; for ye have been the principal cause of them by the dis- reiryrf you have had for God's service. xxii. 22. This is designed as a reproof to Israel tor offering such sacrificed for the service ot God's altar as were imperfect; and such as. if offered to a superior, would not be accepted.- Bib. Mus. T. Ye otter polluted bread-Made ac- cording to your own ways and not as prescribed by law. "By your actions you declare how little value you have for the worship of God, since you care not in how slight and contemptuous a manner it is performed."---). S. The blind for saeritieo--See Lev. bound to 1tonor.-Bito. Mus. Where is mine honor......my fear-Since it is evl.. dent I am not only your Lord and have a right to govern and command you by my creation of you, but also may be esteemed your Father on ac- count of the extraordinary benefits I have bestowed upon you, where are those proper dispositions wnich I might expect to find in you in return l' --numety, reverence tor me and fear ot offending me as your Lord and Mas- ter, and love and honor toward me as your Father.-Benson. Lessons in Givine.--Mat. his prophecies by reminding the peo- ple at God’s great and distinguished love towards them and their tnthers. which they were so slow to acknowl- edge. He then removes them sharply for their sins and Iorewarns them. Time-Between B. C. 433 and 400. Ptaee--Jerunaiem. 1'ertrtrns--MAtacti. Jewish nation. _coP.rtsertterr--conneetimr Links. We should study the whole book of Mal- achi as well as the last chapter ot Ne- hemiah to get that whlch belongs to 9-H†section of history. Malachi opens was. A110! At, SUNDAY SCHOOL , fon. honoreth hi5 "taiiGT..Lrt, PRACTICAL SURVEY. one. IO, was f't Tho appeal of Mrs. Anna Maria Bruce. who claims to he a daughter- ln-law of the fifth Duke of Portland, against the decision prohibiting the opening ot the Drum- vault in High- gate Cemetery. unless the owner of the grave consents to have the cot. tin opened, has been dismissed. Two or three vessels got mixed up and grounded in the river at Little Rapids, two miles below Sault Ste. Marie. blocking the passage tor all large craft. , . ' 8 _ Britt-h who“ Liverpool, Dee. 2..--Wheat, North- emu sprint. 58 10)fi: No. 1 Cul.. Us 1551! to tk, 2d: red winter, 35 Tlist: corn. 39 47434: nous, Gs GU: pork, prime western moss. 57H 61: lard. prime Western. 263 EN: Amerimuun» fine]. :83 6d: tallmv, Australian,:?." lrd: American, good to Cute, Lit; ban-on. long clear, light, 343: lteusy, Ms "i; short. clear, hmvv, 325 (M: eluee, colored, 588: white, Gtis 1'rd: wheat. dull: (11m. Ctrm. Peas. steady: 100 bushels sold at 60 1-.U.v. l Hay, Ready. at $10 to $1] [tor tun for timothy, and 89 tor mixed my. Dressed Hoge-Tri sold at $3.25 to $5.50 per "wt. , so um Ink». Toronto, Ike. 2.,_1{m-c-ipts HT farm produce were Iarir,xv--G,tmu bushels at grain. in loads of hay. I of straw, 7.5 dream“! hogs. with tt (air supply of poultry, butter and (Iggs. Wheat, stpndy. 1,600 lluFlle awning as IolJows: White, 600 bunlwln' "ellistyi at 68 to 690 1-2e.: red, 30†bushels at 68 to (M 1-20.: gnaw. 700 lumlwls at 68 to (me. Barby, steady : 23,000 bushels sold at. ll 1-2 to 43 1-20. Oats, onsite. at 28 l-L' to 29 l-L'v. for 2.000 bushels. l, Rye, steady: 100 bushels sold at. 5);; Oatrnear'-oaoted at $3.40 by the bag and $3.50 by tho barrel, on track at Toronto, in mu- lots. Pens-At 570 north and want, Mr lmmedinto shipment. . Barter-Quoted at. 3H9 fur No. 2 west ', feed barter, 35 to Me. Ite-ttuid at 510 north and west. Bran--rity mills tiell bran at SH and shurtb at $16. in car lots, r. o. 11., Tor-alto. Buekwhettt--rirm: 480 north and Got, east. Corn-Canadian, 3:! to 330 mst Amer-1mm. 40e ml track hora. than and Produce- Toronto. Dee. L'..-inoar - Untnrin patents, 1n bugs, $3.65 to $3.75: straight rollers, $3.33 to $3.45: Hun- garian patents, F3.90: Munimlm lunk- ers', $3.60, all on track at Toronto. Wheat-ontario rod and white, 65'.- north and west; gozmc, 690 north and west: No. 1 Manitoba, hard. 761-2.-. Toronto, and No. 1 Northern at 74 1-20 Ottts---White oats west. '.. -- U - -_e - ynm'wu- 11mlâ€- He would now muse famine to end, the devourer to depart. and the re- proach to (use. He would open heaven to enrich m. people. mun should (Md. earth should pro- duoe her wealth, and all eyes almld see the return of plenty. God's mvemnt and mi of duty and again on)“ to was new. The (It!!! ot own beam should be closed. tim, ot love was gone out. hearts were let to do evil. Th: or pmbatba for the Jews was (lbw with prim and tteotr1e. Em the sacred duties ot the lane. tuary had but: turned into a whey- mnkimr â€In... "0.. J.. -- - .... . 'll Market Reports The Week. and again prove Lai, "X; Art1t_and pm“? pruning. Ft TORONTO P9119 evil. The -iiiiii, quoted at 260 Cttey were en. the shelter of '0 the return " was draw. "We ask for "om! saw voluntary rMrrttriirutiorur." sum Dr. Simpson. "We hold ourselves romlv to return any that may he asked for. But. thny are new:- asked tor. The spirit whieh Inspires the gifts In a love for tho Master. which mukos all othor loves common. and a hope of [its may comlng. which Inspires a joy- ful tmeririve, unwmrled mil and patient; continuance in roll dninx. There are let-van plrls who have given $50 I) 8200 nplem. There are given $50 to $200 nplem. The-re are men who have sold their horses and curringm. and women who have given up costly furniture and wearing eu- pared, but they have dour all this at their own tree will."-:. Y. Herald. At a convention of the Conserve.- tives of South Wellington at Guelph Mr. C. Kloepfer. M. P., was “an nominated tor the Common. Confession on the 'Uttlettetd. At Shiloh. during a pause in the tire of Helen's brigade. the enemy. being sharp and incessant. a young lieuten- ant. as witty and as grave as the brigade contained. was standing he- hind a' tree. A tat and fussy field or. ticer, after [musing by. roared oat: “Lieutenant. what are you doing be. hind that troet--tretsind that tree. air t" The offender left his coer. walked coolly up to his irmible su- perior. and. manly saluting. re- plied: “Sir. I have the honor to re- port that I wan waged in wishing that it grew In my (other: mature." scales whlch they tlmmqelws have withered. they tell of the xlurkmm and desolation of heathenxkun, of the light. and Joy which they haw- been able to shed upon that darknmls. The. people are Btlrrod to their depths try plty for the nurturing and by the longlng to relieve it. "Thom arr natural results that spring from them three mums. But if I Were talklng from my own (looped. mtt!viet.iat1ts I would add that those, the natural, are based ulna the supin- natural. It In bemum our work is good in the sight of tho Lord, "ttvate-, God wills that it should tre done, that Its canoe-s In an great and lmIpnhle. " in He that stirs up the lmurts of the people to give all they mm spurt- tor "In panama. And that In tho outy power that I ehtim.-an Farm-st (ill-o vietioa of tun truth of this grant â€an. tral tart. Yes, I kuuw l have has" accused of hypnotlsm. I m-wr trim! to hypnntlu- any "no in my litv. I lung: no powers of th'u Hort. "H I was explaining to tt man of the world." he mmtinuml. "the awn-t of our euros†l should any it my in three things. First. faith. (bur people believe implicitly in the Bible. There in no higher with-ism among them. They accept tlmN-rlp- “IN“ in their entirety an the inspired Word of God. The 00mm! in tin- power of a great idea. Just an tlie iden ot territorial numnsiun is filling tho alums ot the publh- at Inmv. so the idea of spiritual expansion fills the minds of our conpaeuuttion. To do tho work "minimal by Christ. to extend His empire. tawny the some! to the uttornwnt numer- ot the earth. all this is a mum» of triumph and Julsiintiun tn them. The third tact ll the tangible evidence or the value of this Work. unordml by the testimony of returnml tuitsaiotiarim. They stand upon the platform with the other speakers. they deacrme the Dr. Slmpfeon mimics: to tako any ttertoetaietsdit for theme Inirzmlm. He twinned mo that his coworker" are angled to at least equal vreuit. The Alliance has now owr three hundred mimionnnm in toroimt pun-m. The [lemma] antennas of one misman- ury are 6300 a yaw and $200 is al- lowod for acmsmrim. New [manhun- ary posts have rot-ontly Mon numb- llened in Cuba. in Porto Rim. also in Manila. u I were the martin; "ouertair I would my that Dr. Simian: in the champion mam-y â€in: at the worth He has held: me ctuunpiomsttip 3mm 1894. when he sunk: (Minimum by raising in a. single "uttt-tito night. ot october Wtlt--at Old 0n'huriL Me.. the Immense sum ot $40,000 in. volun- turs subartiptimm [or his own upet'ml church inhuman-y Work in foreign lands. The". na.xuqr lulu-n all rel-(mu he mow-(dad to hunt his own rerun!» on (richer 17th, 1895. at. (humili- Ilall. he rill-id $80400; on Au‘m 9th. 1896, at (lid (Minn-d. Me., in col- ln-wd $101,500: on the following 0c- tuber 17th. at Cerrttrqgie Hail again. he (min-tn! $100,000; on (handler law, 1898. still at Carnt-io "all. he bullet-mod $112,000. It all depends um thtt one hundred (.th an!†plate. It the pad;- ls genuine. an: the be“. Dr. Albert B: Summon. the omciat bmmr0eiarr, ho- Hews amt it hi. than tho-Nd Rev. Dr. Albert. B. Simpson. on last Sunday night. at the uncouth annual coma:- tiou " the Cltritguaa1 and LII-Monuu-y Annalee. held in Carnegie Hall. suc- ctldxi in heating Ms own record we m "olloctor " contribution money. And that. means that he hit; beau-n any? known new“! ot all the world. Some of Rev. k, B. Simpson's Many Achievements. I mlil tlllEf tm. HOWHE EXHANS HIS METHOD. Ra