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Durham Review (1897), 5 Jul 1900, p. 4

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e3 Ic. A L1 yA It is all folly for you to say to someâ€" one, "I could not be tempted as you are." The lion thinks it is «0o strange that the fish should be cau«ht with a hook. The fish thinks it is so strange I have heard men in middle life say they had never been led into temptaâ€" tion. If you have not felt temptation, it is because you have not tried to do right. A man hoppled and handâ€" cuffed, as long as he lies quietly, does not test the power of the chain, but when he rises up and with determinaâ€" tion rosolves to snap the handcuff or break the hopple, then he finds the power of the iron. And there are men who have been for 10 and 20 and 30 years bound hand and foot by evil habits who have never felt the power of the chain because they have never tried to break it. It is very easy to go on down with the stream and with the wind lying on your oars, but just turn around and try to go against the wind and the tide, and you will find it is a different matter. As long as we go down the current of our evil habit we seem to get along quite smoothly, but If after awhile we turn around and head the other way, toward . Christ and pardon and heaven, oh. then how we have to lay to the oars! You will have your mm You have one kind, you r, you another, not one person escaping. ¢ sou! and plant your unshackled feet upon the golden throne, Christ let the tortures of the bloody mount transfix Hlim. With the beam of His own cross Hie will break down the door of your ,dfungeon. From the thorns of His own crewn He will gick enough gems to make your brow blaze with eternal victory. In every tear on His wet cheek, in every gash of His side, in gvery long, blackened mark of laceraâ€" tion from shoulder to shoulder, in the grave shattering, heaven storming death groan, I hear Him say, "Him that cometh unto me I will in no wise east out." You will never get rid of your sins in any other way. And _ remember that the broad invitation which I extend to you will not always be exâ€" tended. King Alfred, before modern timepieces were invented, used to diâ€" vide the day into three parts, eight bours each, and then had three wax candles. By the time the first canâ€" dile had burned to the socket eight hours had gone, and when the second candle had burned to the socket anâ€" other eight hours had gone, and when all the three candles. were gone out then the day had passed. Oh, that some of us, instead of calculating our days and nights and years by any earthly timepiece, might _ calculate them by the numbers of opportunities and mercies which are burning down and out, never to be relighted, lest at last we be amid the foolish virgins who cried, "Our lamps have gone out." Again, I commend the behavior of the disciples to all who are tempted. n ~ome of you crouch under a yoke, d you bite the dust, when this moâ€" ent you might rise up a crowned nquerur. Driven and perplexed as u have been by sin, go and tell Jesus. ) relax the grip of death from your ul and plant your unshackled feet on the golden throne, Christ let the ctures of the bloody mount transfix m. With the beam of His own cross > will break down the door of your DIVINE SYMPATHY FOR THOSE IN DEEP DISTRESS If You Are Weighed Down With the World‘s Woes, Follow the Disciples‘ Example: Go and Tell Jesus. \A Washington report : Dr. Talmage io has finished his tour in England d Scotland, where thousands throngâ€" to hear him wheresoever he preachâ€" . is now on his way to Norway and issia, in which countries he is alâ€" idy well known through the publicaâ€" n of translations of his sermons. the following discourse. which he has it for publication this weex, he gives prescriptien for all anxiety and worâ€" nent and iMustrates the divine symâ€" thy for all who are in any kind of uggle. The text is Matthew xiv.. AT it H head!"" And they carry him home to die on the lap of his mother. Widowhood stands with tragedies of woe struck into the pallor of the cheek. Orphanage cries in vain for father and mother. Oh, the grave is cruel! With teeth of stone it clutches for its prey. Between the closing gates ot the sepulcher our hearts are mangled and crushed. . _ _ Is there any earthly solace? None. We come to the obsequies, we sit with the griefâ€"stricken, we lalk »a thetically to their soul; but soon the obsequits have passed the carâ€" Again, I commend the behavior of the disciples to all the bereaved. How many in garb of mourning*? How many emblems of sorrow you beholid everywhere? (God has His own way of taking apart a family. We must get out of the way for coming generations. We must get orf the stage that others may come on, and for this reason there is a long proâ€" cession reaching down ail the time into the valley of shadow. This emigration from time into eternity is so vast an enterprise that we cannot understand it. The body of the child that was folded so closely to the mother‘s heart is put away in the cold and the darkness. The laughter freezes to the girl‘s lip, and the rose scatters. The boy in the ‘harvestâ€" field of Shunem says: ‘"My head! My "I see Thy woundsâ€"wounds of head, wounds of feet, wounds or heart. Now, look at my wounds and see what I have suffered and through what battles I am going, and I enâ€" treat thee by those wounds of thine sympathise with me." And He will sympathise, and He will help. Go and tell Jesus. _ But what are you to do when you are assaulted and slanderea and abused, as I suppose nearly all of you have been in your life? Go out and hunt up the slanderer? Oh, no, silly man‘! While you are explaininx away a falsehood in one piace fifty people will just have heard of it in other places. I counsel you to anâ€" other course. While you are not to omit any opportunity of setting yourâ€" selves right, I want to tell you of one who had the hardest things said about Him, whose sobriety was disâ€" puted, whose mission was scouted, whose companionship was denounced, who was pursued as a babe and spit upon as a man, who was howled at after He was dead. I would have you go unto Him with your bruised soul in some humble child prayer, saying: that the lion should be caught with a trap. You see some man with a cold, phlegmatic temperament, and you say, "I suppose that man has not any temptation." Yes, as much as you have. In his phlegmatic nature he has a temptation to indolence and censorâ€" lousness and overeating and drinking, a temptation to ignore the great work of life, a temptation to lay down an obstacle in the way of all good enterâ€" prises. The temperament decides the styles of temptation, but sanguine or lymphatic, you will have temptation. of temotation wanted a th very weak an ppling hook just fitted A man never lives beâ€" lected craw thron it well again. How power of temptaâ€" i a weak and cripâ€" give it a chance rant in your soul; ) atoms. No man orever overcome has left the world. o do with these everybody about a silly man you night a commandâ€" ord to the enemy when the wave fic dash, shall 1d on to? In world, the flesh . _ man have no text intimates In those eyes thany sisters I iat voice which bjyoke and the *k her lost son _a throne preâ€" eak and sickly, he would soon led _ upon his , and havieg ong again. He me while I was of another that w that I have s least barred what all your your temptaâ€" 1 only caricaâ€" it you. What. toop â€" any away â€" his th of Great Britain sats up her entire | wheiit crop in about 13 weeks. At the time of his death Adam Foreâ€" paugh was wholly devoted to his young wife, and he left her the bulk of ris fortune, besides the controlling interest in the cireus, which for years had borme his name. This sho> afterâ€" wards sold to James A. Bailley, repreâ€" senting the Barnum & Balley interest Mr. Nagle is said to be handsome and a little more than 40 years of age. He is empioyed at the Gerard Bank, one of the oldest financial institutions in the Quaker City. He resigned his posiâ€" tion in the bank before his marriage. Mrs.. Forepaugh, after her husband‘s death, lived with Mr. and Mrs. Fish in one of the most luxuriously appointed houses in Philadelphia. Friends of the couple say that their wedding trip will carry them to China, whero the bride has friends. her marriage with Mr. Nagle has a tinge of romance, although their acâ€" quaiptance has been of several years‘ duration and for the last two years they have been betrothed. All of her gowns were Parisian creations, made by Worth, Felix and other wellâ€"known masters in â€"the dressmaking art, and Mrs. . Foreâ€" paugh‘s appearance | was striking. She has frequently visited this city, where she has a host of friends. The bride‘s maiden name was Mary C. Fallman, She is 38 years old. Her family lives in Philadelphia, where Mrs. Nagle long was regarded as one of the most chic and best gownâ€" ed women in society. ; The Rialto was much interested in the news toâ€"day. It was a complete surprise, except to a few intimate friends. They deny that there was ttzny particular secrecy about the afâ€" air. New York despatch : Mrs. Adam Forepaugh, widow of thoe famous showman, is a bride on the broad Atlantic. She saile@ for Europe â€" on ‘the Augusta Victoria with her husâ€" band, Walter Nagle, a Philadelphia bank clerk, last Thursday, the day after they were secretly married at Grace Church, in this city. The Rev. Wilson Poe (Carey performed the cereâ€" mony. OFF ON A BRIDAL TOUR. FOREPAUGH‘S WIDOW WEOS Husband a Bank Clerk Two Years Her Senior. whither? the glad tidings, if now, with contriâ€" tion and full trustfulness of soul, you will only go and tell Jesus. But I am oppressed as I think of those who may not take this counsel and may remain unblessed. I cannot help asking, what will be the aestiny of these people Xerxes looked off on his army. There were 2.000,000 menâ€" perhaps the finest army ever marshalâ€" ed. Xerxes rode along the lines, reâ€" viewed them, came back, stood on some high point, looked off upon the 2,000,000 men and burst into tears. At that moment, when every one supposâ€" ed he would be in the greatest exultaâ€" tion, he broke down in grief. They asked him why he wept. "Ah," he said, "I weep at the thought that so soon all this host will be dead!" So I think of these vast populations of immortal men and women and realise the fact that soon the places which now know them will know them no more, and they will be goneâ€"whither? arm, not feeble of resources, but with Aall eternity and the universe at His feet. Go and tell Jesus. Will you? Ye whose cheeks are wet with the night dew of the grave; ye wiho canâ€" not look up; ye whose hearts are dried with the breath of sirocco: in the name of the religion of Jesus Christ, which lifts every burden and wipes away every tear and delivers every captive and lightens every darkness, I imâ€" plore you now, g0 and tell Jesus. If you go to Him for pardon and sympathy, all is well. Everything will brighten up, and joy will come to the heart and sorrow will depart; your sins will be forgiven and your foot will touch the upward path, and the shinâ€" ing messengers that report above what is done here will tell it, until the great arches of (God resound with the m« can ex sonl, arm, n all ete seeing you are all power, will His arm and : He is mighty t be del rescue troubl resou rathe than the And will sometimes when w« go to our friends a and they try to syn do not understand of life and give haggardness to the face and draw the flesh tight down over the cheek bone and draw dark lines under the sunken eye, and the hand is tremulous, and the volce is husky and uncertain, and the grief is wearing, grinding, accumulating, exâ€" hausting. rlkges have left us at the door, the friends who stayed for a few days are gone, and the heart sits in desoâ€" lation listening for the little feet that will never again patter through the hall, or looking for the entrance of those who will never come againâ€" sighing into the darknessâ€"ever and anon coming across some book or garâ€" ment or little shoe or picture that arouses former association, almost killing the heart. Long days and nights of suffering that wear out the spirit and expunge the bright lines liv 1J intain and dis inguish the fir Not dim of ej t feeble of res han tha ered wh ry sw ) fron uj Hov H m its scabbard a infinity be ~ H Y than of stream, unâ€" ng trees? Has he barren comâ€" o! no! He has sympathy and understands all height and the not emnipotence d and all the exhausted ild shall not to r:iim for hild was in our dead, to whom power in t our call , and at resence of esounding id. He is is swifter der than ik 34 ty 38. The will of Him that sent meâ€" Christ made the long journey _ from heavenâ€"to earth, not as a private perâ€" son on & priv¢ate mission, but " to setâ€" tle affoirs betwoen tho great Creator and th»> whole creation." Christ the world‘s life. The converâ€" sation of Our Lord was not calcualâ€" ated to encourage those worldlyâ€" minded ones, mwhose only object was to secure His ald in gaining temnoral power. He sought on‘ty to encouraze the faith nechich would lead: honest hearts â€" from things tenKoral to things eternal. He anss:rea them that splritual food is provided, and: that Teachings.â€""Men often piy an cexâ€" ternal regard to Christ and His orâ€" dinances, not for the purpose of honâ€" cring him and obtaining spirituail blessings, but for the purpose of proâ€" moting thei> worldly interests, and accomplishing theb> selfish ends." PRACTICAL +SURVEY. 37. That the Father giveth meâ€" Thos* who yield to the influences of the Spirit, when the Father draws them (v. 44), belongs to Christ, inasâ€" much as H> has purchased them and through His blood alone they can be eaved. In no wise cast outâ€""Never did Jesus rej»t the cry of a penlâ€" tent, hbowever grievous his crimes might have haen." 39. i should lose nothingâ€"It is God‘s will that all should be saved, and %at nothing be lost. Clhist will lose nothin:; that is committed to him. 40. And believeth on Himâ€"All who believe on Him are to be saved, and will be raised up. 86. And believe not. They closed their eyes, and would not accept the moit positive proofs of Christ‘s diâ€" vinity. t 35. I am the bread of life â€" Jesus keeps them in doubt nojlonger; and yet, when Ha speaks plainly the mysâ€" t*ry only deepens; so blind is the natural heart. I am the one who giveth life unto the world and saves from th> death of sin. Shall never hungerâ€"*"Shall never desire spiritual grace and shall not have it given to him 34. Evermore give us this bread â€" They did rot understand yit that He was speaking of Himself. They had as vague a conception of His meaning as the Samaritan woman at the . well had of the "living water." They needâ€" ed what they had ignorantly asked for. 4 383. Unto the worldâ€"The manna was given to the Hobrew nation for a short time ; the "true bread" was for the whole world f9° all time. 2. That that was not the true bread, but merely a type of it. 3. That God had given them now a bread infinitely more excellent.â€"Clarke. Giveth youâ€" â€"Gol is continually giving the true bread. Fex "meat which endureth." 290. That ye ‘believeâ€""Faith is the principle which produces good works." Whom He hath sentâ€"If you desire to do works pleasing to God accept His ambassadorâ€"His representative in this world. 30. What signâ€"Sign is th>~ usual word for miracle in John. That we may seeâ€"Proof had been given them again and again, but their darkened minds could not pereeive the truth. They seem to cavil here, too, for they had just seen the miracle of feeaing the five thousand. 31. Did eat mannaâ€"They really say to Christ that He must not expect to establish His claim as Messiah by giving five thousand one meal, {for Moses did even more than tlat; he fai vast millions for forty years, and his was "bread from heaven," while Christ used barley bread and fishes. As it is writtenâ€"Ex. xxi. 13â€"18. 32. It was not Moses that gave you (R. VÂ¥)â€"Our Lord refutes their arguâ€" mant by showing, 1, That it was not Moses, but God, who gave the manna. 27. Which perishothâ€"Our chief objeet in life should not be to gain temporal supplies. _ Every man sbould be diliâ€" gent in business, and should carefully provide for his bodily wants, but still that is not the principal thing. Which endurethâ€"We are to labor for «piritual and eternal good. Which the Son of manâ€"The torm is especialiy approâ€" priate hore, a» it is only by virtue of His incarmiAjon that Christ gives this enduring â€" food.â€"G. W. Clark. +~Shail giveâ€"God gives us His good things and yet we must seek for them. Sealedâ€"To real anything is to attest by some elgn that it is genuina. 28. What shall we coâ€"Those who asked this question are evidently not th> same as those who murmured at h‘m in verse 41. The works of Godâ€" Works that will be pleasing to God and will be th> means of securing the Jt attracted to Christ by any revelaâ€" tion that they saw in Hi(miracies, of Mis love, or Mcssiahship _ They comâ€" prebhonded no «piritual meaning. But because ye did eatâ€"They were seokâ€" inz Him purely from selfish considerâ€" ations. They were looking at the reâ€" sult of the miracles rather than at the divine agoncy that had produced the them dress was dolivered in the synagogua V,. lix. Gelkie eays it was either Monâ€" day or Thursday, cne of the days of the synagogue worship. Verily, verily â€"The repetition of this word among the Jewish writers was considered of eqaual import with the mosé soiemn oath.â€"Clarke. Not becauseâ€"They were 23,â€"Other â€" boatsâ€"Which â€" ugually carried over wood and other commoâ€" dities, from the eastern districts, had come from Tiberias. 25. Rabbiâ€"Masser, teachor. W hen camest Thouâ€"It was a mystery . to them how he got across thu sem withâ€" out being seen. 28. Jesus answoered thamâ€"This adâ€" Commentaryâ€"22. The day â€" followâ€" ingâ€"Following the feeding of the five thousand. When the people......... sawâ€"Some of the people had tarried on the plain where the five thousand had been fed over night. Where was the place?â€"Capernaum. Who were the Persons ?â€"Jesus. His disciples. The peope. YL 22â€"71 What is the Outlineâ€"I. Seeking the meat that perisheth. IL A rebuke adâ€" ministered. III. The true bread given. IV. Christ‘s earthly mission. Supt.â€"What is the Golden Text? Schoolâ€"Jesus said unto them, 1 am the bread of life. John vi. 35. What is the topic?â€"The true bread. What is the Ceontral Truthâ€"All who believe in Christ shall be saved. And INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 8, 1900. SUNDAY SCHOOL lesus the Bread of Life.â€"John 6 : 22â€"40, What is the special reading ? John When was the Time?â€"April A. D NO. 11. Guelphâ€"The crops in this section are on the whole looking very well. The fall wheat to the north and east will average about twoâ€"thirds of a crop, while to the south and westy it will be a fairly good crop. Hay is not looking quite as well as in former years, and will only be half a crop. All the spring grains are looking exceptionally fine, Altbhough perhaps a little early to Fspeculnt.e. they will turn out good _crops. _ Roots are looking well; tho prospects for a good yield of potatoes were never brighter. The apples are slightly blighted in this section, and: some farmers complain of their apples falling off the trees. The weather has been beautiful all season. 4 Welland. Wellandâ€"Hay, very light; wheat, /good, above aveorage; oats promise fair; peas and barley fair but not much sown; corn good; hoe crops fair; fruit promises good yicld. All crops are suffering for want of rain. The Shah of Persia on his way to the Paris Exposition will vigit The Hague, an event to which the young Queen looks forward with no litt!e apâ€" prehension, having heard much of the varied exporiences of other sovercigus on the occasion of the visits of the late Shah.. ; Cornwall Standard : Mrs. James Arthur Curran, Canada‘s military artist, has an interesting collection of autographs which she has receivâ€" ed from many distinguished persons. One is from the Queen‘s private seeâ€" retary, Sir Arthur Bigge. Others are from Lord Wolseley, Lord Roberts, Lord Chelmsford, Gen. Hutton, PDan Godfrey. Mrs. Curran has had the great honor of letters from the above, having painted military sub jects for them. Mrs. Curran is a cousin of Mr. Ed. Giles, of Sussex, England, . who won great â€" fams through his _ celebrated picture of the Heary Brigade at Balaclava. which the Queen has, and he is now with Gen. French‘s army, in South Africa, sketching aut;{gotn for future raimncl. 'Mr. and Mrs. L;urmn n'l.-e in n at present, stopping at the Balmoral Hotel. St. Catharinesâ€"The extreme drouth that has been prevalent in this seeâ€" tion has greatly impaired the crops in the district, especially on the sandy soil. Of the strawberries, which promised well, fully oneâ€"third dried up on the vines. Peaches good, full crop. Pears light ; plums good ; app‘es faur; chorries very light, Wheat promises fair cron ; corn very backâ€" ward ; oats light ; hay very light. Barley only fair crop. Oxford. Woodstockâ€"The crops in this section are on *he whole very good. The grain crop promises to be good. Hay is fair, being rather short on the straw. Of the small fruits plums and cherries are light, while the rest promise a fair crop. Maldimand. Cayugaâ€"The wheat crop is the best in this vicinity for years. From present indications it will average 25 bushels to the acre. Oats, peas and barley are in good condition, and promise a good crop. Hay is poor and will not be half a crop. Brant. Brantford â€" In regard to small fruits, currants will be good, gooseâ€" berries very light, raspberries â€"fair, cherries light, plums light. Hay about average, but short in straw. Corn promises good ; _ potatoes promise good; apples a fair average; oats promise good ; barley good ; fall wheat promises a good average crop. Yery little spring wheat grown here. ‘The late rain appears to have had good effect, The fo. lowing crop reports, gatherâ€" ed by agents of the (Great Northwestâ€" ern Telegraph Company, and dealing principally with the westorn part of the Province, show, on the whole, fair prowects. FAR â€"FROM but the perpetuation of spiritual life in the world to come. ‘The faith that unites us to Christ inspires us with endless life,. It is the will of th» Father that whoso believeth on the Son shall have everlasting life. He who hath "life in Himself" quickeneth those who believe on Him, and assures them that they "shall hear His voice, and shall come forth ........ unto the resurrecâ€" tion of life." NOTES ABOUT THE CROPS, Reports Show That Drouth Has Been Hurtful. enough to Christ. A ; ke is that food. "I an the Wbead of ‘life." V. 35. The death) of Christ was a wo"ld ; and as "no hwman life can be preserved without prop>r nourish= ment," so no soul tan be saved by, the merit of Chris¥‘a"death. Man in his nnreil'umte state is without this life, He is dead in sin. All his powers are dead to spiritual aetion. (Christ alone can infuse life into the dead powers of the soul, renovate the nature, and produce a corresponding â€" change in the conâ€" duct. ‘This abundant life insures to its possessor liberty, holiness, _ disâ€" tinguished | privilege, â€" and _ inspires with peace, joy and exhilarating hbope. Nothing can take the place of Christ. He is the lifeâ€"1L. Of all Christian activity. Only by union with Him can one become fruit{fal in every good word and work. Christ lives in u«t as the soul lives in the bodyâ€"actuating every member and penetrating every particle 2 Of ail spiritual {growth. 3. O aill spipit« hal enjoyment. _ As Christ becomes our life "our dispositions are greats ly softened and aweetened, oure views of lifo and death become difâ€" ferent, ard our interest in carthly things less engrossing." Faith the connecting medium. In no way can man please (God so perfectly as by believing in His Son. " This is the work of God, that ye believe on Him whom He hath sent." Y. 29, By faitly the Christdife is apprehend, and the Lord Himsel{ is brought in personal contact with man‘s inner being. Faith establishes a sure and most blessed Connection between Christ and the soul. It is the \vim! over which the current of divine life passes to the human heart. It is not ' t formed. f Eternal in duratior but the perpetuation in the worldt to come unites us to Christ The folow Mrs. Curran‘s Autographs. _ admire the character of more intimate relation must W ellington. duration. Eternal life is Lincoln. STARVATION YET Abbe Mazreux, the astromomer, has discovered and sketohed through the biz telescope in the ‘optic paiace of the Pazis Expruition a remarkable sp>. on the sin, fo>rsin< a mart cxtensive gooup an l hâ€"â€"oa ; a We to: of pouzly fort® *‘:to>aatrem _ The trade situation at Winnipeg is less satisfactory ithis woek. The umâ€" favorable crop reports have disapâ€" pointel merchants. The general feeling is that if balf a crop of wheat is seâ€" cured it will bo all thaif carn be hoped for now. The result has been a tenâ€" den»y towards retrenchmant on the part of the busin‘ss community. There is a goo1 demand for money and the market is firm. London wholesale merchants are wellt ratisfiel with the recent trade doze on sorting orders for the past woek, The outiook for the fall is good. Business at the Coast cities is not up to the mark. The saies are not as large as expected and the collections on acâ€" counts recently have been disappointâ€" ing. The activity ia the lumbes operaâ€" tions and the prespects fo ‘the cane ning senson are encouraging features of the trade situation for the fubure. The sorting season at Hamilton haw been quite active lately. _ The retail trade appears to be in good shape. I‘reparations for the fall trado are being made on an extensive scale ; fall sales already made are large and the outlook for business is considered enâ€" couraging. Bradstreet‘s on Trade. Trade has been rather quiet at Montreal this week. There is a good sorting demand for summer dry goods. Fall orders are fairly numerous from eastern sections of the territory, but some Manitoba orders have been canâ€" celled owing to the poor crop pros pects. Reports from the coast are »0t Kery. bright. : 1 Trade at Toronto has been fairly acâ€" tive so far ap sorting orders for the summer are concerned. The position of the dry goods market is yery satie factory and the outlook for business is promising. In other wholesale trade departments business is fair for this season. The factories and mills have plenty of orders on hand to keep thens busy for the balance of the summer. Values continue firm. at all certaln.â€"wfia-nlipfgv'(‘o;-n;fi:l:l. June 23rd. A good deal of wheat has changed hands daily at advancing prices, and from 74¢ a week ago yesterday the price for No. 1 hard spot Fort Wiâ€" liam, has climbed up to 87c at the eclose of yesterday‘s market, an adâ€" vance of 13¢ per bushel on the week ended last night. No 2 hard and No. 1 Northern are 2%e under No. 1 hard. ‘The weather has been exceedâ€" ingly warm this week and a high wind prevailed during two days. The continued prevalence of high winds during two or three days of almost every week has been one of the reâ€" markable features of this unfayoraâ€" ble season. _ Manitoba â€" suffered geâ€" verely from drouth in two yearse of the past eighteen or twenty years, but at no time since we have had a gGrain trade has there been such a combiration of ginfayvorable cirâ€" cumstances as during the present season. Present indications point to, a total failure of all late Crops. Rain at once, with a favorable sumâ€" mer thereafter. might bring late crops to maturity safely,. but the season is far advanced to make this The local market has been strong, with prices following and some@imes outstripping Minneapolis and Daluth. Utica, June 25.â€"Utica Dairy Board of Trade. Cheese sales, 128 lots of 1Q0,â€" 255 boxes ; large sold at 9e to 9 1â€"2e¢; small, 9c to 9 1â€"4¢c. Butter, 37 packâ€" ages at 19c¢, 110 packages at 19 3â€"4c. Lindeay, June 25.â€"Â¥ictoria County Cheese Board met this morning. Buyâ€" ers presentâ€"Whitton, Fitzgerald, Rolâ€" lins and Flavelle ; 1,8696 boxes boarded by 17 factories ; 480 boxes sold at 9 7â€"8e,; 435 boxes brought 9 3â€"8e remainder sold off board at 9 13â€"16¢ Next sale will be held July 9. The Wool Markets. Offerings are large, but buyers an sellers are somewhat apart. Price seem firmer and are quoted nomina at 16c for washed and 10¢ for un washed. . Wild Day in Wheat at Chicago. Chicago, June 25.â€"Wheat broke nearly 5e toâ€"day under heayy liquidâ€" ation, but closed steady at a decline of 2¢ from Saturday‘s close. Corm closed le to 1 1â€"8c down; onts, le higher, and provisions from 17 1â€"2¢ to 20¢c, reduced in ribs to 32 1â€"2¢ lower for pork. It was a wild day ‘u wheat, a batâ€" tle between bulls and bears, in which the latter, for the first time in weeks, scored a viectory. Cheese Markets. 8 10. HeOUAKENE ; . . , . ++ .3 a +x xi« ty d nt Butchers‘ common, per ewt.. .. Bulls, export, heavy, per cwt.. Bull«, export, iight, per cwt. ... Steers, shortâ€"keep, 1,10 to Milch cows, each... ......... Export cattle, choics, por ow Export cattle, light, orer cwt Butchers‘ cattle, choice..... Butchers‘ caitle, good.... ... Fib. : TA008.â€"â€" > 1ss s« +s TE HIOURD: s \2ss ars ns xi Detroit, red... .. ... Detroit, whit>... ... .. Duluth, No. 1 North ?;i Chicago... New York Milwaukee OTMev) io+ kok +rn Duluth, No. 1 i Minneapolis, No Northern... ... Minneapolis, No Leading Wheat Markets. Following are the closing prices at important wheat centres toâ€"day : Cash. _ July, ChiGa#®o... ... ... .‘ ... â€"â€"â€" 80 86 V mmA n n n Arnrarra eA aa 8 0424 %4% 41062228 242 Toronto Live stock Market. Manitoba Grain Markets No. 1 hard por cwL , but buyers and it apart. Prices _quoted nominal nd 10¢ for unâ€" () HR T.R 0 87 0 84 3â€"4 0 90 0 90 1â€"4 0 90 1â€"4 0 87 5â€"8 () K9 1â€"8 0 (Â¥1 T8 % $30 00 to 00 5 00 to.“;” 175 to 500 1 90 to 4 90 0 88 1â€"8 0 87 38 0 85 14 U 90 1â€"2 0 20 3â€"4 091 1â€"4 4 10 25 9 0

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