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Durham Review (1897), 13 Sep 1900, p. 3

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the by ulsion | Â¥. A little le three or will su l thinpgz baby does t as fast as 1% 1900 \v® ther just A : # have all looke® into the grave. 8o, when trouble aR%d grieft go â€" down through the heart Qf one member of the family, they go down through them all. The sadness of oneris the sadness of &@ll. A company of sons join hands &round an electric ttery; the two persons at the end of t ine touch the battery and all the cféle feels the shock. Thus, by reason ®f the filial, maternal and paternal relations of life, we stand so closse together that when trouble sets its battery all feel the thrill of distress. In the great Christian family the sorrows of one ought to bol the sorrow of all. Ig, one persecuted? All are persecuted. Does one suffer 0 rat th th jou Troy ngs or p B THE GLORIOUS HERITAGE OF _ THE CHILDREN OF THE KING They Have a Grand Family Name and a Regal Family Mansionâ€"â€"High Dignity of a Christian. W zgton report: In this disâ€" c. Taimage, who during his omeward has seen much of th W W _family sorrows. e member of the . is the custom, d into the grave, to come to the 1 look down into st the departed f kin, until they the grave. _ So, H iJ p‘endors in passâ€" )itals of Europe, no higher dignity it my ist, that all oked to the ung to the ameé p nameâ€" 129 as a A t nity l If you rejoice at another‘s misfortune than | you are not one of the sheep, but one is a [ Of the goats, and the vuliture of sin hath 18 alighted on your soul and not the Dove *_ ) * | of the Spirit. Almost every family looks back to & homesteadâ€"some country place where you grew up. You #gat on the doorsill.. You hearl the footsteps of the rain on the garretâ€" roof. You swung on the gate. You ransacked the barn. You waded into the brook. You thrashed the orchard for apples you his heart and his hand, saying in the words of the Canticles, "Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away." And once having put on thy hand the signet ring of his love, you will be endowed with all the wealth of earth and all the honors of heaven. claim, ‘"Eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him!" As these tides of glory rise we have to retreat and hold fast lest we be swept off and drowned in the emoâ€" tions of gladness and thanksgiving and triump»h. What think you of the family propâ€" erty? It is considered an honor to marry into a family where there is great wealth. The Lord, the brideâ€" groom of earth and hcaven, offers that that n gaze, So much of his property is willed to his sons and so much to his daughters and so much to benevolent societies. Our Lord Jesus hath died,. and we are asâ€" sembled toâ€"day to hear the will read. He says, "My peace I give unto you." Through his apostles he says, "All things are yours." What, everything? Yes, everything!‘ This world and the next. In distinguished families there are old pictures hanging on the wall. They are called the "heirlooms" of the Next, I notice the family property. After a man of large estate dies, the relatives assemble to hear the will read. loss? We all sufter 10 reaved?» We are all ber rees that r never can Their streaming eyes together flow For human guilt and mortal woe. in $ w t ts, until we can no longer » hide our eyes and exâ€" hath not seen nor ear r have entered into the 1 the things which God . We look off upon the i never fade, the eyes ep, the temples that e loved ones that never ession that never halts, never wither, the walls 1 be captured, the sun esiate in one take gseveial nily property is is so great al walks to nt. Let the s earth. All s that wave that pasture s and the eneath them they cast at The morning he mists travel untain above t. The forests uzz and song. ng flutter with ave us they a Savior‘s vheel into the downâ€" for arching wasted capâ€" r quee rl‘s need morning near it, ts and towers. twelve. > and the etâ€"meâ€"not in? Light p! Light he flocks brow of vision of Is one be > l0g Ar squirre A av . Our hung is the flam have neraâ€" auties a] ms Mr. R. H. Ingram, Treasurer of the Central Vermont Railway, fell overâ€" board from the steamer Bohemian, just above the Lachine Rapids. He was rescued by three Indians after being in the water twenty winutes. A. St, Louis car and foundry comâ€" pany has been awarded a contract for constructing 68 passenger coachâ€" es for the Government of New Zeaâ€" land. a u West Assinitoia Conservatives have renominated Mr. N. F. Davin, M. P., for the Commons. The Department of Agriculture has decided to issue a directory of the Canadian breeders of live stock. The cendition of Hon. ‘Mr. Mar chand, Premier of Quebec, is _ re ported much improved. and entwine them among the arches. Leat David come with his harp and Gaâ€" briel with his trumpet and Miriam with the timbrel, for the prodigals are at home, and the captives are free, and the Father hath invited the mighty of heaven and the redeemed of earth to come and dine! I was at Mouht Vernon and went into the diningâ€"rbom in which our first president entertained the promâ€" inent men of this hnd other lands. It was a very intereing spot. :ut, oh, the banqueting hal o the family mansion of which Taspeak! Spread the table, spread it widg for a great mulâ€" titude are to sit At. rrom the Tree by the river ther the twelve mamner of fruits for‘the table. ‘Take the clusters from th§ heavenly vineâ€" yards and press themt into the golden tankards for that taÂ¥le. On hraskets carry in the bread of®%which if a man eat he shall never hubger. Take all the shotâ€"torn flags of earthly conquest While I speak some of you with broken hearts can hardly ‘moid _ your peace. You feel as if you wourd speak out and say: "Oh, blessed day, speed on! Toward Thee I press with blisâ€" tered feet over the desert way. My eyes fail for their weeping. I rfaint from listening for feet that will not come and the sound of voices that will not speak. § Speed on, oh day of reunâ€" ion! And then, Lord Jesus, be not anâ€" gry with if after I have «issed Thy blessed*feet I turn around to gather up the long lost treasures of my heart. h, be not angry with me. _ One looK at Thee were heaven. But all these R%eunions are heaven enâ€" circling heave heaven overtopping heaven, heaven commingling with heaven!" it too . much for thee? Dost thou break down under the gladness of this reâ€" union? Then I will help thee." And with His one arm around us and the other arm around our loved ones He shall hold us up in the eternal jubiâ€" lee. you come together at the old place. ' How you wake up the old piano that has been silent for years. Father and _mother do not play on it. How you bring out the old relics and rummage the ‘garret and open old scrapbooks and shout and laugh and cry and talk over old times, and, though you may be 45 years of age, act as though you were 16. Yet soon it is goodby at the car window and goodby at the steamâ€" boaut wharf. But how will we act at the reunion in the old family mansion of heaven? It is a good while since you parted at the door of the grave. There will be Grace and Mary and Martha and Charlie and Lizzie and all the darlings of your household, not pale and sick and gasping for preath, as when you saw them last, but their eyes bright with the luster of heaven and their cheek roseate with the flush of celestial summer. What clasping of hands! What emâ€" bracings! What coming together of lip to lip! What tears of joy! You say, ‘"I thought there were no tears in heaven.‘" There must be. for the Bible says that "God shall wipe them away," and if there were no tears there how could He wipe them away? They cannot be tears of grief or tears of disappointment. They must be tears of gladness. Christ wit come and say: "What. child of heaven is | be 45 years were 16. Y car window boat whart It took a Taxton to build for Chatsâ€" worth a covering for the wonderful flower, Victoria Regia, five feet in diameter. But our Lily of the Valley shall need no shelter from the blast and in the open gardens of God shall put forth its full bloom, and all heaven shall come to look at it, and its aroma shall be as though the cherubim had swung before the throne a thousand censers. I have not seen it yet. I am in & foreign land. But my Father is waiting for me to come home. I have brothers and â€"sisters there, In the Bible I have letters from there, telling me what a fine place it is. It matters not much to me whether I am rich or poor, or whether the world hates me _or loves me, or whether I go by land or by sea, if only I may lift my eyes at last on the familly mansion. It is not a frail house, built in a month, soon to crumble, but an old mansion, which is as firm as the day it was built. Its walls are covered with the ivy of many ages, and the urns at the gateway are abloom with the century plants of eternity. The Queen of Sheba hath walked its halls, and Esther and Marie Antoinâ€" ette and Lady Huntingdon and Cecil and Jeremy Taylor and Samuel Ruthâ€" erford and John Milton and the widow who gave two mites, and the poor men from the hospitalâ€"these two last perhaps outshining all the kings and queens of eternity. A family mansion means reunion. Some of your families are very much scattered. The children married and went off to St. Louis or Chicago or Charleston. â€" But perhaps once a year ABriiniih t 14 thaBt cmiedit diida d c the parks. Angels walk there and the good of all ages. The poorest man in that house is a millivnaire and the lowest a king, and the tamest word he speaks is an anthem and the shortest life an eternity. we think of Chatsworth and ltl_ap&l'l_l_ nine miles in circumferencée &nd it3 conservatory that astonishes the world, its galleries of art that contain the trlumphs of Chantrey, Canova and Thorwaldsen, of the kings and queens who have walked its stately halls, or filying over the heather, have hunted 1 and the neighboring woods for nuts, and everything around the old homeâ€" stead is of interest to you. I tell you of the cld homestead of eternity. ‘"In my fahter‘s house are many â€" manâ€" sions." When we talk of mansions, we think of Chatsworth and ltl_aparl_x_ nine miles in circumferencée &nd Its conservatory that astonishes the be tears of grief or tears tment. ‘They must be iness, Christ wil come What, child of heaven. is Thoughts. Covetousness is a Eross form of selfishness and is very ofâ€" fensive to God. Those who trust in riches ara sure to come to want. The soul is the real man ; the body is only the house the man lives in. The way to lay up treasure for one‘s selft is to be rich towards God. PRACTICAL sSURVEY, How nce:ssary the injunction, "Take heed, and beware of covetousness !" Truly it is an awful sin, since the covetous are classed among idolators, adulterers, thieves, drunkards, revâ€" llers, etc., of whom it is said they shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Rowever, there is not a word in the Scriptures to prove that this rich man was vile, profans, or a wicked sensuallst. H> was lost through beâ€" iIng a covetous workiing. Bis circumstances. One word tells it; he was rich. B had a great proâ€" perty. â€" His income was great. Prosâ€" pority attended him, His ground broughit forth plentifully. The pleaâ€" sures and positions that money could bring to him he had. From this paraâ€" 23. The life is more than meatâ€" The God who has given the greater thingsâ€"the life and the body, will surely give the smallerâ€"food and raiment. The God who provides for the ravens, the lilies and the grass (y8s. 24â€"28) will surely provide for His disciples. The farmer who feeds his chickens will certainly feed his children. "O ye of little faith," "your Father knoweth that ye have need of these things." (R. V.)â€"Do not allow the things of this life to cause undue anxiety and unrest. "Prudent care is not forbidâ€" den, but only anxious, d'lstm(,-t.lnf care." We should be diligent in busiâ€" ness and yet trust God for al things. 20. But God saidâ€"Sooner or later God will speak and our worldly plans will be interfered with Thou foolâ€" His folly is fourfold. 1. He forgets God. 2. He approrpriates all he reâ€" ceives to himself. 3. Me counts these things sou! food. He thinks not of dea tin This nightâ€"Immediateiy, with no time for preparation. Is thy soul required of thee, (R. V.) â€" That is, thou shalt be called on to leave this world and meet th;‘()‘-ud .He has lost all. "He comes before His Judge with a lost nameâ€"God ys, "Thou foo!l" ; a lost soul ; a Iuix world â€" his possessions must be left behind ; and a lost heaven." Whose shall those things beâ€""It will not tter to bim into whose hands the pass. This is only an emphatic way of sayâ€" ing that they will not be his." 21. So is heâ€"Here is a personal application of the truths taught to His hearers and also to us. ‘‘This is not an individual case. All who make this life their portion and arQ desâ€" titute of the ‘salvation of God ‘shall sooner of later be surprised in the same way." For himselfâ€"For himself only. A covetous man gains riches to please and gratify himself, with . no thought of the good he ought t®do with his wealth. Is not rich towlms Godâ€"Does not lay up treasure â€" in heaven. We can be rich towa God by turning what we poss 1 over to God. hoard them "all" up. 19. I will say to my soulâ€"*" The wouw, considered as an immortal spirit, was no way interested in a barn full of corn or a bag ful, of gold. The soul has exigencies and desires which these things will in no _ way satisfy."" Take thine ease. etc. â€" This was exactliy the creed of the anâ€" clent athelsts. What a â€" wretched portion for an immortal spirit ! And yet, those who know not God have no other, and many of them not even this.â€"Clarke. Eat, drink, and be merryâ€"The ambition of many worldâ€" lings seems to rise no higher than this. years as a certa‘nty. 3. How selfish ! There is no provision made for others. 4. How unworthy ! His idea of life is a low one: indolent ease, eating, drinkâ€" ing and merry making.â€"Taylor. Build greaterâ€"This was the decision he reached, Ho des‘red more room for his earthly goods. . He was planning to hoard them "all" up. 17. He thought within himselfâ€"â€"The worldly rich are often miserable, They have, "1. Discontent, 2. Anxieties and cares, 3. Falso hopes. 4. The terror of losing their posscasions." "Mere multiâ€" plication of his wealth, and the se}â€" fish enjoyment of it, take up all his thoughts." What shall 1 G&â€"â€"That his increased prosperity offers him opâ€" portunity to do something for his poor brethren, does not even enter his mind, sellishness _ strikos the keyâ€"note.â€" Lange. Because 1 have no roomâ€"The poorest beggar in the country, who did not know where to obtain the next meal, could not have been more anxâ€" lous. To bestow my fruitsâ€"A wise man will desire no more than what he can get justly, use soberly, distribute cheerfully, and leave contentedly.â€" Bacon. One of the greatest evils toâ€" day is the spirit of "‘greed" which has taken possesslon of so many. ‘ 18. This will I doâ€"Man proposes. 1. ‘ How boastful! He says my fruits, my barns, my goods and my soul. 2. How shortsighted ! He speiks of many years as a certainty. 3. How selfish ! There is no provision made for others. 16. A parableâ€"To teach 1. How short and transitory lifte is. 2. That riches are of no avail jor prolonging It. 3. That the duty of all, both rich and poor, is to be rich towards God. Brought forth plentifullyâ€"He did not acquire his wealth dishonestly, but it was given him by his Creator. What good he might have accomplished had ho used it in a proper manner instead of hoarding 1t up. 15. Take heedâ€""Covetousness is a sin which we have need constantly to watch against." Of covetousnessâ€"All Inordinate desires. Such a disposition of mind is never satisfied, for as soon as one object is gained, the heart goes out after another. Man‘s life conâ€" sisteth not, etc.â€""Our happiness and comfort do not depend upon our hayâ€" Ing a great deal of this world." ‘The life of the soul doth not depend upon It, and the soul is the man. or a judicial power to determine con troverabes. 14. Manâ€"Apparently in â€" reproof.â€" Hom. Com, _A judge or a Aividerâ€"In matters of this nature Christ would not assume eith>r a leglislative power to alter the settled rule of inheritances, Commentary.â€"13% One of the comâ€" panyâ€"Probably a stranger in the crowd, who had been listening to the address Jesus had been delivering to His disciples. Spsak to my brotherâ€" This was evidently a family dispute about the property that was to be divided. The Rich Fool.â€"Luke 12: 1323, INTERNATIONAL LEKSSON NO. X11 SEPTEMBER 16, 1900, SUNDAY SCHOOL not anxious for your life There are many signs that the military nutdm'riti;fi regard the end of the war as clos® at hand. â€" Lord Roberts is making? preparations to return to England, and has already gent four of his chargers down to Cape Town. The general beliet â€" is that Lord Roberts is coming home to take up the post of Commanderâ€"inâ€" Chief of the British army, which Lord Woilseley will vacate in October. ‘Anâ€" other indication of the same ‘kind is that the personnei of the army tranâ€" sport in Orange River Colony has been paid o{f and disbanded, and the Imperial Yeomanry and Scouts emâ€" ployed in that country have arrived at Cape Town, also with ‘the object of receiving their final pay glor to embarkation. It is hoped that the war may be declared omoh:l‘ over before the general election, is almost certain to be held in October. These swindlers§%are unknown _ to the police here the names they gave. a yourself. ‘ â€" ‘"The brick isn‘t worth$$s. "If you try to gell it your neighâ€" bors will take you for an eseaped lunatic. They won‘t feast a man who goes into the woods to follow his businessâ€"honest men don‘t hide themselyes. (Cry, how!, hnd do the water cart actâ€"that makes no difâ€" ference to me. "I‘m too foxy for you to pinch. "Your shame will follow you to the grave. I‘ll send you a copy of _ a paper which publishes an account of your deception, so that you‘ll not take me for the @nidest kind of a robber. Your oldgfriend, he purchased the brick for $13,000. He shipped the brick to the First National Bank in Denver, and the cheat was at once‘ discovered. The brick was brass, asd worth $6.81. Another Simfar Case. A few days ago a ‘gold brick man approached W. TY and L Gordon, wealthy men of l)un‘yillp, Que., and wanted to sell them & brick. All the details were gone thraugh with as in the case with Kerr, (xul an assayer said the brick was worth $10,000. Tho swindlers were wBling to sell it for $5,000, and this aftoused the susâ€" picions of th> purch s. They notiâ€" lied the detectives, but *went on with th> scheme, and as the @windlers were having cashed the cheqne which the tordons had given them they were arrested and thrown into jail. ‘They wgave thoir names as Stephen Pratt, Abner C. White and Jghn Saunders. They answer the description of the men who swindled Kerr, and they are thought to be the same. , Insult Added to lojury. In possession of Pratt was found the following letter, which l\f evidently intended to mail after he had got out of the country : l ‘"My Dear Mr. Gordon,+â€"I write to tell you that you have Wbeen taken in by the old game called the gold brick. Take a knife, scragch it, und‘ you‘ll find nothing good ingide. You‘re a good thing, thoâ€" and @iways will' be. You can‘t make an becile of lice believe they are the men who aswind‘ed Kerr. Kerr is the Presigent of the First National Bank of tâ€" ings, Neb., and when a man #ame alomg with a gold brick to & he took to the scheme like a mer girl to iceâ€"cream. He went t into the woods, whore he met Indian with the brick. Kerr took fili#igs from it und had them assayed. The as8a y was so high that he fig 4 it out that the brick was wor $18,000. It is evident that geftuine gold V.ings were adroitly e anged for the brass filings that # were taken from the brick, else K@#r would have discovered the fraud men makâ€" Ing the sale said th#y needed money and wou‘ld sell for $5,000. Kerr has been in the banki business a long time, and has legPned that when a man wants mone# he will accept conâ€" giderably less n he first asks, so he purchased the brick for $13,000. He shipped the brick to the First Three gold brick swindlers were arrested at Montrea) Canada,/ a day ur so ago, as they were about to turn another trick, and the poâ€" Deaver report. â€"William Kerr, the kindâ€"hearted _ Nebraska bank presiâ€" dent, who thought he was buying an $18,000 go‘ld brick for $13,000, will in all probability have a chance to eee behind prison bars the man who aswind‘ed him. The gold brick f which Kerr paid $15,000 was worz; §6.81. ] SWINDLED A BANK PRES!DENT. A GOLD BRIGK STORY, A Good One, Too, But of Doubtful Veracity. "Take heed and beware of covetous ness,"â€"H. D‘Forest Gaffin. His end. ‘"‘‘Thou fool, this night," etc. Thinking only of time and temporal good ; presumptuously calculating on years to come ; boasting of toâ€"morâ€" row ; he will tear down his barns and build greater. Having many years in which to live he will lay up for ease and pleasure; he will eat, drink and be merry. While thus thinking ; careâ€" less, heedless and forgetful of God Who had permitted him his prosperity, he is startled by a voice saying, *‘ "This night thy soul shall be required of thee." ‘Temporarily blest, but eterâ€" nally lost! From plenty and riches he goes into eternity a spiritual pauper. gor. & His character. " Thou fook.": God calls him such. In the midst of plenty h‘s covetous, avaricious disporition hungers for more. He had been, and was still, making temporal and finanâ€" clal matters his greatest aim and end. For this he has great concern, spends his time chiefly, gives all his labor,.and utterly neglects his infinitely greater Interestâ€"the salvation of his soul. All who do so are extremely foolish. Again, h‘s foolishness is seen in his trying to satiafly his soul with temporal things. This cannot be. 22206 II°0H POvburDs to the wic , AB we‘ll as to the righteous. OnoTalng. however, is very certain, that | those who are rich are exposed to ‘many tomptations and are in great danâ€" ble, as also from Psa. Ixxlii. 3â€"12, we learn that this world is not a world of retribution, and that te poral prosperity may attend the #icked, but that it is no sign of divine pproâ€" bation,. _ God is displeas»d wifh the wicked, n({‘:‘ he causeth the s to shine and the rain to fall on the just and the unjust. Good gener hip, a wise and careful financiering, ) econâ€" omy and frugality exercised; will bring rich returns to the wlcl&ad. a8 Significartt Signs. 8e " From Arizona a chance to the man who 1d brick _fi 0 was wor?l: to The British commercial agent in Russia, Mr. Cooke, has just issued a very optimistic report on the great transâ€"Siberian railway. â€" Siberia, he poin‘s out, is no longer a mere Russlan penal settlemeant, but a young count with a great future before it. The rlii way has already diffused hundreds of thousands of settlors over the vast doâ€" main, and is opening gold deposits which it has not hitherto baen possible to work at a profit. _ Siberia already ranks among the leading goldâ€"produc~ Ing countries, and other important inâ€" dustries are expected now to develop rapidly. In many respects the history of Siberia is curiously like that of Ausâ€" well employed and the outlook for the local trade is bright. Prices are genâ€" erally firm. Country remittances are fair for this season. Wholesale trade at . Montreal shows a little more activity this week. Country remittances are fair for this season. _ With more grain moving they would be better. The presence of many country buyâ€" ers in the Toronto market this week created _ considerable activity in wholesale circles. _ The house sales this week have been large. There is a better feeling in business circles at London. The good harvest has improved the feeling in the country. There is a fair movement ‘in wholeâ€" sale trade circles at the coast citâ€" les. ‘The business situation at Winâ€" nipeg is encouraging. Business at Hamilton is quite acâ€" tive. Large shipments of fall and winter goods continue to be made and orders coming forward are very encouraging. Labor in the city i@ From the Toledo Market Report : It is too early for conclusions reâ€" spocting the foreign wheat crop, and yet, as thg crop has been reached, inâ€" dications are worth something. The crop in the United Kingdom is likely to be deficient 6,000,000 bushels « to £,000,000 bushels, and the quality lowered as compared with last year. But Beerbohm estimates the quanâ€" tity in stor? in first hands, Aug. 11, the stock afloat and the reserve in farmers‘ hands at 38,440.000 â€" bushâ€" €Is, compared with 41,656,000 bushâ€" ¢ls last yearâ€"an additional deficiency o( 3,216,000 bushels. The â€" French crop is largely short of last year‘s, bump*r crop, but the current estiâ€" mat» of reserves of previous crops indicate a supply of Frenth wants in this crop year. . The grade of the wheat has been stated to,be lowerâ€" ed, but all this may yet modified. Fpain, Italy, Gormany, A ia â€"Hunâ€" gary and Eassla, al are by some authorities as deficient, either From the Toledo It is too early for specting the foreign yet, as thy crop has dications are worth crop in the United J to be deficient 6.00( Ts 1 20 7 Jamenovedte Bheep, butcher«‘, cach ... Epring lambs, each .. .. ... 0. DEF EW ,....1 .+. :+ . . Caives, per head.......... Hogs,.choice, per owt... .. Hog»,light, per owt...... Hogs,heary, fat, per cwt Hogs,corn fed .......... .. PSOWIEL u0222 0004 ceb kA exporters, mixed.......... Butchers‘ cattle, picked .. _ Butchers‘ cattle, good .. .. .. Butchers‘ medium, mixed Butchers‘ common, per ewt i!_:otshm"“l:fodcr.........“ FNoodersy MHHL .3 /+ 1+3 4s e+0 + Milch cows, each.., ... ... ... Sheep, export ewes, per cw 1 pears, 20 to 40c.; apples, 20 per basket ; cho‘ce apples, pe #1 to $1.50 ; green corn, 3 t dozen ; potatoes, 30 to 35¢. p( Canadian perches, 25 to â€" basket ; yellow peaches, 40 Crawford peaches, 65 to K5¢.; berries, 5 to 7¢c. per basket 30 to 40c¢.; musk melons, 15 per basket, and 30 to 40c. p celery, 35 to 50c. per dozen : tags AP Receipts of fruit toâ€"day down at the wholesale depot were heavy. Tomaâ€" toss, 10 to 20c.; cucumbers, 10 to 15¢.; pears, 20 to 40c.; apples, 20 to 40c. per basket ; cho‘ce apples, per barrel, Timothyâ€"The market is at $3.75 to 85 per 100 lbs. In Toledo toâ€"day October $6.40 and closed at $6.37 ; â€" at 86. The fall trade has not yet fully beâ€" gun. Local dealers quote offers for timothy, alsike and red clover. Alsike is quoted at $6.50 to #7 per bushel and $7.50 for fancy lots. Red Cloverâ€"The new crop has not yet been harvested. Dealers here quote $5.50 to ®%6 per buzhel. Hay and Strawâ€"Ten jloads of hay sold steady at $10.50 to %13% a ton, and two loads of straw at $10 to #10.50 a ton. Oatsâ€"Three hundred bushels of oat« sold 1â€"2¢ higher at 29 to 31 Barleyâ€"One Joad sold steady ; to 44 1â€"2¢. Ryeâ€"One hurdred bushe}s sold lower at 536. wAPd ... .. . ... .+ N075 34 â€"â€" Toronto Farmers‘ Market. Wheatâ€"Two hundred bushels of red fall wheat sold unchanged at 69c¢, and ::9() bushels of goose steady at 65 to northern . Minneapolie, shard ... ... O MICURBNC nes ie ser ns x ~New YTork ... ... ... .. Mitwaukes® ... ... ... .. TOedo ns :s« 1. .+o s Detroit, red ... ... .. Detroit, white ... ... Duluth, No 1 Borth Duluth, No. 1 hard. Minneapolis, No. 1 The Siberian Railway. Bradstreets‘ on Trade Wheat Crop Foronto Frait Market Toronto Seed Market. .00 ; green corn, 3 to 5¢. per otatoes, 30 to 35¢. per bushel; i peaches, 25 to 35¢. per yellow peaches, 40 to 60c.; No. 1 hundred bushels of new higher at 29 to 31¢, load sold steady at 48 s, 65 to B5¢.; Lawton per basket ; plums, _ melons, 15 to 200 0 to 40c. per case ; â€"« O751â€"2 â€"â€"â€" . _ O713â€"4 O 72 . 07534 077 . 076 1â€"2 O77 â€" O75 munmae . _O75 Sâ€"%4 â€"â€" .O77 34 â€"â€" Abroad. 073 I »ber opened at 7 ; cash closed 4 25 developing #$0 73 Tâ€"8 0 T9 14 0 T2 14 0 77 14 o C

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