" 'hin ' ' 1900. d HOMJI CHE SALE. l dollar t,r dollar and are put downyin - the (Wilma/431 catalogues as At. Whom the Lord loveth he gives $400.- 000 and lets die on embroidered pli- I lows? No; whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth. Better iter your hand on the Lord's razors. lest they cut and Would people that do not deserve-M. It you want to shave " some of the bristling pride of your own heart, do no, but be very careful how you put the sharp edge on others. How I do dislike the behavior of those persons who, when people are unfortunate, say, "I told you 're-getting punish- ed-served him right."' " those I- toid-you-so’s Bot their deserts. they Mould long an) have been pitched over ah. battiements. The mote in their neighbor’- eyes. so small that it irentres a microscope to and R, gives About more trouble than the beam which obscures their own optics. With nir somtimos supercllloua and w, Mount†phorinaiesl and niways â€anthem they take the rasor of Mine Judgment and sharpen It on 1th hone at unit own hard heart. and that so to work on men 'gtrawted out at mu Myth under cluster. shaving ,lorcilessly. They begin by aura-don- 1"reetinnattarpeaittan"tte 'dHt'2"tfc.'"'"""t"""'t on than 04s.. Let us be ell-em! how we shoot at other. lest we take down the wrong .no. remembering the tenant of 32-. William Rufus, who that at a. “or. but the Arrow glanced against â€in. and kind the king. but.“ of “I. out with shaft- to plum and m 00 cm we had better imitlte the C Richard Coeur do Lion. Rich. fortum tuber] heaver proud I mmn' Icrupu two M tuna pron those men I ht pro honest hto b pan over Don't judxn 0v out ~lined ruor t of Auyria, v gtattty, to do In palm-es u III I: Du the ook Como of its prosper!!!" cut off, and God sends against it three Auyrlar hugs-nu: Beetnacherib. then Enr- hdden and afterward Nebuchtdnu- at: These three sharp kwulons um cut down the glory .ot Judâ€. are compared to so many sweeps of the compan mar a orking grids to d for In ly.., the toile tn his Jourm “toâ€. has re thrilling mum this GOD’S JUDGMENTS ARE RAZORS Be Careful How You Handle Thefn'i-Mis- fortune Not Always Evidence of Divine Disapprobation. 'uit Wmlnm report: Dr. Tainan, I ha Journey westward through bet. Idvmced in can. In Bible I and remained an may If?! we: you, who ha [my n the Bible the gentle mommy cloud and the duybretk ht the presen- h. we often ttnd the iron [honing the mhquuke. I sword. and. in my text, This keen bladed Instru- mced in usefulness with l Bible time. end lends lubed uncut an ht the n-ts Red - of . He and: e no“ “at tia world mud tor a?" vir- rm to their h vil.. 20: "In ' Lord - '1. namely: by y the has ot lemme! u, but “I in; Never in the history of the use: was any land more thoroughly lhuvod than (during those four years ot civil com- ‘bat, and, my brethren. it we do not quit tome of our Individual and na- tionnl It“ the Lord will again take us in hand. He has other razors within reach beside: war-epidemics, drought; deluxe. pitwuetr--srrtutesttoprrer and lo- tntttt-or our overtowerinx luccon may so tar excite the Jealousy of other land: that under some pretext the (not nation- may combine to put no down. Our nation. no - approach- " on north and south from both - might have on but! a once more homtttttes than were ever u- [timepieces may be out ot order and [strike wrong. saying it ls 1 o'clock when ’lt is 2. or 2 when it is 3. God's clock It: always right. and when it is 1 it (strikes 1. and when it is 1?. it sunken {12. and the second hand is as accurate was the minute hand. 3 Further my text tells us that God sometimes shaves nations. "In the same day shall the Lord shave with a razor that " hired." Wlth one sham sweep he went across Judaea. and down went lte nrlde and Ilts power. In 1861 God shaved the American nation. We had allowed to grow Sabbath deseeration and oppression and blasphemy and fraud and impurity and mu sorts of turpltude. The south had In aina, and the north its sins, and the east its ulna. and the west Its sins. We had been warned "ttitt and agaln. end we did not heed. At length the sword ot war out from the St. Lawrence to the gulf and from Atlantic unheard to PtteMe seaboard. The pride ot the lend, not the cowards. trut the heroes, on Both sides went down. And that which we took toe the sword of wet we. the' Lord's mor. In 1832 3:111: lt went‘ nm- ttte lend; in no “in: in Ml Quin. Then the sharp instrument In: I hosted and put away. stances have Been llberadng kings. Mo In: razor. Especially ought w Ind merciful toward they have great taut virtues. Some peep! virtues. No weeds v Richard Coeur de Lion had taught him in other days. And one day, coming before 1 jail where he suspected his kin: might be incarcerated, he any two lines of song, and immediately King Richard responded from his cell with the other two lines, and so " whereabouts was discovered, and a successful movement was at once made (or his liberation. Bo let us tro up and down the world with the music ofWind words and sympathetic hearts, sere- nading the unfortunate and trying to get out of trouble men who had noble natures, but by unforeseen circum- stances have been incarcerated, thus friend went around the land from stronghold to stronghold and sang to each window a snatch ot song that ard, in the war of the CruMeI. wat captured and imprisoned, but none ot his friends knew where, so his loyal " we to be apologetic vard those who, while faults, have also great eople are barren of a. verily, but no ttow- be too much enraged rreaeen Circum- :arcerated. thus hymn book: and Mr. W. B. Bennett. Comer-nth M. r. tor Bait Shame. ha. been WI nomhateti for that It“. , ', Mrs. Brescl has not written to her husband to tell him of the event. She does not believe the letter would reach him If she did, and fears the he will never even know ot the daugh- ter whose face he can never use. wall Wire of the Assaaalnof King Humbert lo Stlll Living In Hoboken. New York, Sept. 2T.--A daughter has been born to Mrs. Gaetano Bresci, who ot the assassin of Klng Humbert. The event occurred Saturday night In the home at 863 Clinton avenue. West Hoboken, In which Bra-cl had tn. stalled " wife before leaving tor Italy on his total mission, but " was not made known. even to the nelgh- bore, until yesterday. The lnlant ls healthy and the mother ll doing us and washed us from our sins In His, own blood and made us kings and priests forever." Alleluia, Imen. At our national capital a. monument to him who did more than anyone to achieve our American independence was tor scores of years in building, and moat of us were discouraged and said it never would be completed. And how glad we all were when in the presence of the highest omcult, of the nation the work was done'. But will the monu- ment to Him who died for the eternal liberation of the human race ever be completed? For ages the work has Been going up. Evangelist: and apostles and martyrs have been adding to the heavenly pile. and every one of the mil- lions of redeemed going up from earth has made to it contribution ot gladness, and weight of glory. higher and higher as the centuries go by, higher and higher as the whole millennium: roll, sapphire on the top ot Jasper. sardonyx on the top of chalcedony and ettri- pram above topaz, until far beneath ahall be the walls and towerl and dome. or our earthly capitol, a monu- ment forever and forever rising and Pet never done, "Onto Him who both loved King Henry It. of England crowned his son as king and on the day of cor- onation put on a. servant's garb and waited, he, the king, at the son's table, to the astonishment ot all the princes. But we know of a more wondrous Bcene--the King ot heaven and earth offering to put on you, his child, the crown ot life, and in the form ot a. ser- van: waiting on you with blessing. Extol that love, all painting, all sculp- ture, all music. all architecture. all wor.. ship'. In Dresdenian gallery let Raph- ael hold Him up as a child, and in Ant- werp cathedral let Rubens hand H113. down from the cross as a martyr. an Handel make all his oratorio vibrate around that one chord-me was wounded tor our transgressions, bruis- ed for our iniquities." But not until all the redeemed get home. and from the countenances in all the galleries of the ransomed shall be revealed the wond- ers of redemption, shall either man or seraph or archangel know the height and depth and length and breadth ot the love of God. be no novelty to those who have pond- ered the Calvarean massacre. where God submerged Himself in human tears and crimsoned Himself from punctured arteriq and let the terrestrial and in- 2itejfc,'.f'oi maul Him until the chand iers of the sky had to be turn- ed out, because the universe could not endure the outrage. Illustrious for love He must have been to take all that as our substitute, paying out His own heart the price of our admission to the gates ot heaven. King Henry It. of England crowned his son as king and on the day ot cor- onation put on a. servant's garb and BRESCI HAS A DAUGHTER. nonm, Moesxa. Dacia, Thrace, M100- don-la. Greece. Asia Minor. Syria. Phoenicia, Palestine, Egypt and w Northern Africa and all the islands of the Medlterrtsneaat, indeed all the world that was worth having, a hun- ancient Rome carried. In the “loan of that eagle were clutched at one time Britain, France, Spain. Italy. Dalmatia, Rhaetla. Norieum, Pan- nonia, Moesla, Dacia. Thrace, Maco- ourselves, defy the' Almighty. . One would think that our national symbol ot the eagle might sometimes suggest 'another eagle-that which I toyed min-t my one power. I hope no men communion mine: in will over he formed, but I won-t to chow that, on Any"; wu the hired rotor "ainat Judo“, and Cyrus the hired mar nuns: Babylon, and the Hun- the hired razor union the Goths, more ore now mony rm" that the Lord could hire if, because of our nation“ Ilnl. he should undermine to lhave no, In 1870 Germony was the Pturor with which the Lord shaved France. Japan was the razor with which He shaved China, and America. the razor with which He shaved arrogant, op- preseive and Bible hating Buain. But nations are to repent in a day. May a speedy and word-wide coming to and hinder on both sides the sea all national calamity. But do not let us as a nation, either by unrighteous law at Wushirupton or bad lives among ourseives, defy tho Almlzhiv V my text, that God in so mg that when at is nec- m to cut he has to go to he sharp-edged weapon. ltr " people " eagle. rbon, the The De- 1Nachintpr.--We should do good even 1bhoutrh we may be criticized for it. It is highly proper to perform acts of mercy and love on the Sabbath day. Jenn brought confusion to His enemies-they could not answer Him ', and so it will also be, for the one append to Christ is doomed to mm defeat. The indulge-on and display at prlde ladle“. out Irkut- sam. at heart. _ PRMmCAL' SURVEY. ' _ b Mark alone monk the event. at next Pmmier n this Deana. although none at tttq known. but. the truth: has taught by tho Mutter botm m J. are given at other than and Ind-r Ban. Horne Age “are“ (showman. " In - attBattta. In - 13. Call the poor-Feasta to the poor are not forbidden. He that giveth to tho poor lendeth to the Lord. "What the Saviour here commends to oth are Be haar Hlmself fulfilled In the moat illustrious manner. To the feast In the kingdom of God Re has Invited the poor, the blind, etc., in the spir. ltual sense of the words." 14. Thou shalt be b1anred-'he poor who have been ted wlll blem thee, and so wlll the Lord. You wlll be conscious ot having tweed unealllehly, they can- not recompense thee-Therefore God will consider Himself your debtor. - Clarke. The recur-motion of the Jul! --2bare is to he a. future new: we are ell hastening on towards the recur 12. Call not thy friends --The sec- ond parable is to the host. "It is a sharp rebuke on amount. of a fault which Is almost, always committed“) the, choice of guertaC--Lantre. -"God resist/*th the proud, and giveth grace to the humble. Humble your- selves thererore under the mighty hand tl God, that he may exalt you in due t me." It. For every om that anlteth him. self shall be humbled, R. C-The one who Is proud and seeks to be honor. Pd above others shall be abused. or humbled. both by God and man. "This ls tho oehangealrle conduct. ot God." See But. Tir. 12-15; Obad. ill. 4. Ho that humlrleth himself-It la better to humble oursolvm, for it we do not God wlll humble as. Shall be exalted IO. In the Iowmrt room--"The lowest place." R. v. Go up hightt--"Tho way to rise high ls to begin low." "No shame attaches to tho one who takes a low place." What Christ commanded others He Himself did. He humbled Himself in His birth, in His life, and in His death. "Then shalt thou have womhip--"Bave glory." R. V. Thin person will receive honor in the prev woe of the company. '. 9. Ho. that bade-Tho host, who has authorlty to decide the matter. With trtuune--t3ooner or later pride will have a fall. The man who humble him- self merely bmsause. he is forced to do so lose: the respect of both God and G. Fallen into a pit~Jesus allenms them completely by calling attention to the tact that they on the. Sabbath day would have nwrcy on n beast. in distress, and shall not He on the b'ate bath day deltver this suffering man I' 4. They held their peaco--"The Pharisees taxed the conscience ot the Wople with puerile questions. such as whether it was lawful to eat an egg on tho Sabbath. or ot what ma- terial the wick of the Sabbath lamp should be made," but they did Hot for- bid this miracle, which they should have done had " ' wrong; they were. therefore, forced to silence. Took him-Lald his hands on him. Let him go-IHU sent. him away. _5. Fallen into a pit-Jesus sllencrs 9tnt-tarr.r-1totuHtituhutort. The .ioliowing us the principal "out. in the Mk of Cheiqt durl tho but quarter, continued from {anon I of this third quarter: 48. Dinourno on this bread of life. IT. At the border- ot Tyre and Eldon ‘Ho rental-ed tho demulac daughter oi atVrophoeetic- inn woman. 48. Journey through De- capolis. 49. Healing a. den! otammer- er. BO. Feeding the four thousand. GI. Ballad to Dalmnnuthn. tw.. Salied to Bethsaida, where He' healed in blind man. Mark viii. 22-26. 53. Jour.. neys to Caesurea Phliippi. Gt. Peter's confession. GG. This trtuiaCguratlon. 66. Healing the demon-lac boy. GT. Journey to Caper-mum. 58. Tribute money taken from the mouth of a. titrhu 59. A lesson in humility from "the child in the midst." 00. Discourse on the forgiving spirit. 61. Rejected by the Samaritans. Luke ix. 52-56. 6:3. At the least ot Tabernac'pa. 63. The blind man healed at the pool of Slinnm. IU. Discourse on the good shopherd. 65. Goes into Peron. 66. The Seventy sent forth). BT. Parable of tho good Samaritan. 68. Parable on tho 1 rich fool and discourse on. the duty _ or watchinlnrm . 69. Healing a woman on the Sabbath. TO. At the least of Dedication, 1. Cltior 1'liaritcetr--" has boon aug- g'I‘atal that this man may have men a. member of the Sommedrlr. With a country homo in Peres. To eat bread _ -our Lord had no home, and, when he was invited to dine. it was unpro- ner tor him to go on tho Sabbath us on any bther day. They were watch- ing him (R. YO-were maliciously watching hlm.--CUrtte. The Pharitree, whiln h," professed frienuehip,had in- vited Jrsus to his table for the pur- pos.“ of finding an opportunity to ac- cuse him and take away his life. . L'. A certain man before hinr--Tho mun had probably been brought there and placed in this company by the Pharisae in order to test Christ. 3. And Jesus answering; spake-Ho knew they were deceptive, and he was ready tor them. Tho lawyers--- Ttw teachers of the law who were pvt-Psalm. is it lawful, etc.-TIteyare in a dilemma; us lawyers they ought to know, but if they answered in the aHirmative they would endow: Christ and his work, while, to un- swnr in the negative would be to show tlvir lack of love and lay thnmselvcs liable toa chug.- similar to that given in chapter xiii. 15. Jenn Dining With a Puri-Luke teu. t INTERN ATIONAI; LISBON N0. XIII. OCTOBER T, 1900. SUNDAY SCHOOL lt as egg mu- amp In 1879 Mr. Mnrchnmi received from the French Government. the decoration of the Order of the Public Inithute. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal-l Society of Canada in 1882, President of the French section in 1884. Woe- Presldent. of the aoclety in 1896. and President in 1897. In 1819 the degree of Lit.D. was conferred upon him by Laval University. Montreal. He was married on September 12th, 1851,to Mlle. Marie Herselle Turg'eon. Fouling In Montreal. Montreal. Sept. 26.-Gretit regret was expressed In all quarter. of the gym to-nght as the W ot the death Hon. F. G. mum in Quebec. There were few mm la public we who commanded and: high meet. from all thud†ot polltlclmns and among the cltllens germ-ally; the late Premier’- lnbegrlty and uprlghmerl were every- where mm. The Baton: Club Wnlght. passed a meoltttimt ot nym- pcthy and caudal... with tho tam. ur. Mr. “new “i. It In “nought. will have: Nrttt, hour- lng on FM ' . a u M- anny hollow“ _ k not PtmiUse will at tor (ll-cl tMt a. [and election- - .. . , onâ€, an Wqgnier will, " - in 'Rotr3t.,trgt an ,l.a31'.ig't no Shortly after the Trent affair Mr. Marcha.ad initiated the volunteer movement in the district of Iberville, the result. being the formation of the L'1at Battalion Richelieu Light In- fantry. to thrs command of which he succeeded in 1866. Ho was on active â€vice during the sublequent Fenian raids, his corps being sent. to tho front at the first alarm. Follow- ing the invasion at Eccles Hill. two, ho was placed in command of the bri- gada composed of the Prince of Wales' Own Rifles. the Victoria. Rifles, the Royal Scots. the Rochelaga. Light In- fantry and the aut Battalion. This force was nut to reinforce Col. Ge borne Smith. and on that and other occasions Colonel Marchand undated important services to his country. His getirmd from the militia, retaining rank. in 1880. . Mr. Marchand was for many years actively Maximum with French-Cana- dial: Journalism, the tone and charac- ter of which he did much to elevate. L'amJointly with the late Hon. C. J. Labertre, Q. C... he established. in 1860, Lo Frtutco-Cattturten, the F men Liberal organ in ma district'of Iber- ville. He was also for a. time chief miitor ot Le Temps. ot Montmi. and subsequently contributed to moat ot the French-Canadian Liberal papers in tin Province. He won distincdon as the author of several (humane works. among them "Fatenville," a. comedy, 1869: "Ex-rent n'eut pas Comm." a vaudeville, 1872: “Un Bonheur en Ann-e un Autre," a comedy, 1884. and “Lea Faux Bril- lantar," a Comedy. 1885.and published a manual dealing with the notariai profession in Canada. election since. He was the lather of the Home. He held olllce in the Joly Government ln 1878-9. first as Pro- Secretary and afterwards an Com.. mlsoloner of Crown Lands. From 1887 to 1892 he was Wake:- ot tho Leg- islative Assembly. On the deReat ot Hon. Honore Mercier at the polls in 1892 Mr. Marchand became leader of the Liberal party in the Legislature, and as such opposed tho Flynn Gor- ern-ment at the elections in 1897. M.. ter the ddeat and restgnatlon of that Administration he was en- trusted with the duty of forming a new Minutrs. He and bk colleagues were sworn in on May 26th. and he h-lmcelf took the Treasury portfolio. He continued in charge of the tin- tutceq of the Produce up to the time of his dentin ' Hon. Felix Gabriel Mar-chem! mm a son of the late Gabriel Marchand, merchant, of St. John's. Que., and was borm January 9th. 1833. He was educated at at. Hyacinthe. and at the age of 23 was called to the bar. He entered upon the. practice of his proleesiqrn in St: John's. and con- tinued it up till the time of his death, with the exception of such times as he was engaged in administrative work in Quebec. He was returned to the Leglslature as member for St. John‘s in the year of C'auataderatiun, 1867. and retained the seat at every election since. He was the father of the Home. He held ortice in the Joly SKETCH 0F Quebec rtsport: Hon. E. G. Mar. chand. Prime Minister. died at 7.45 with arterio sclerotic card! theneai. and had been confined to his room since the prorogation or the Pro- vincial Legislature in Mar last. The Lienttsruuttahrvernor. who is at pre- sent in Montreal. has telegraphed his condolence to the family. The Quebec Loses an Able and Useful Ciizen. MllEll 1lllMllill HEAD. There was another lesson to the Jews. They constantly exalted themives as the “uhoaen of God" and saw no place tor the Gentiles, whereas the Gentiles. who took the lowest place. were being exalted. An- other truth was suggested by the occasion. viz.: only relatives and rich neighbors were invited. A sel- fish motive was back of this ; a. prin- ciple natural enough. to the human heart, but quite at variance with the with ot the Muster. or TIN, Pharleeeu as well as to the much people. Be It the Saviour of the world; the high as well an the low. The gin-pal should be offered to the rich; they may not accept, yet Christ'- great heart takes them In. Lady Huntington said. "Only for the nether 'ng' I could not have been sav- ed; if the teaching had been 'not nny.’ instead of 'not many noble are called,' etc., I would have been left out." _ that xit., when He hauled the with. orod haul on the Scuba}: and (us a m to those who objected lyuat. to just given tn our loam; A Loyal Canadian. lighter As a Journalist. HIS CAREER M k aioiF "if 5"..." 2Ti! "fdtWiet'tt'lutft'2et5t _ at ‘Wlnn 1- 1- 'terthm; {up L'lt,,12'ae,tA"dL.'. TIl " cattle and dairy produce. that is an active movement to the can!!! imminent to the Old Country - eos. l Bantam at the (but eitieq lull: been ot tate volume thi- week. "te, Jobbing trade for claimant to' alto -rtoutrtastherPrdvimserttnat-' furl: active. The lumba- lndutry b mu; lugs nnnhen ol an. n.- work at the Ian. on". up} mphPEQWIL - ', 7 I real this week. The absence of In.“ failures is favorably realm-ted on br the wholesale trade, they are to" than tor many years. Prices, except in a few lines of hardware, are gener- ally steady to firm. There has been more activity Inf Wholesals circles at Toronto thi- - " a result. of the colder “and Sales of tall and. hue been W51 TtPt-ttiii/ii-arf-G-Gr-Gr","'. ment. in than. The run all“; no will moderate, In the q-tegt?y:' export. In In», m other “an. a" Cowtamvtlle, Que., Sept. 22.-At the weekly meeting or the Eastern Torn- ship" Dairymezn's Board of Trade here Ito-dam 68 factories offered 3.460 boxes of cheese and one Creamery offered 86 boxes butter; 19 1-20 bid tor butter: none cold. J. Gibson mm 251 how ot chem at 11 3.16:. Bud-treot’l on Trsdo. Colder weather with a with autumn tinge has Incl-cued the ttmt. 'ee mum: yet winter good: " long: London. Sept. 22.-At today's mun ket seven (actor-1m ottered 1.100 boxe- hnt half September cheese. mostly cobra}. No sales. Bidding from lie to In Toledo today October openedae $6.85 bid and December (12.36.75 to 86321-2; October closed at. 86.95 asked and December at $6.75 bid. Cheese Din-ken. Pelleville, Sept. 22.453“ Metal-Ian toardej 1,140 boxes cheese. white, Sep- tember make, 11 1-4c offered, but no “as made. l 1 7-106 'nmour-Tts market is steady at $3.75}; $5 pu' 100 um Deliveries of fruit down at tho wholuale market to-day were about 8.000 packaga. difrerintt only alttthtt. Iv from those of yeaterdny. Prion show a. marked undone] to lower Ik- ures along all linmr. Pearl. 10e to 200 per “at: to. mntou, 10c to 20c; cucumbeu. 10c to 15c; apples. Ith' to 200; choice, Toronto Seed Market. There u very little chance in thtr med market as yet. um I: selling freely, but others have not beg-unto move In any quantity. Rod cumrr--Doaien, here note w_$6 per bushel. . q "git, Alsitte-It, unéted a}. $6 to " pl! bush! for good to prime and 87.50 to $7.75 for (may lots. GO to 75(- per basket: plums. 25 a) 603: muslnnelons. 1214 to 15c per basket and The to 81 a barrel; col- ery, 20 to ttre per dolen; buckle berriea. To to Wye per basket ', grapes. small basket. 12% to 2Oe; loofah early, 1254 to Looe; Niagara. 12K to 202: red grapes.15 to unbu- anas, $1.25 to F.'. per bunch; - plant. basket. 20 to 250; "at potatoes, barrel, $1.00 to “.50; basket. MM. 200 per Wt. ham], " to $2; tomatoes. 10 to Lie per hunt: op- ples, 10 to Soo per back»; 3pm.. choictt, per barrel. 503 to 81; m Uoru, 30 to 7c per dozen: potatoes. .30 to 350 a bushel; peaches. 2Oto 10e per basket; Crawmrd pencils. GO to 75c por basket: plans. 25 i) 602: muskmelons. 12.5; to 15te no:- The market hold! remarkablx steady. Receipts why were litrttt. er than for Dome time, about 7,000 packages. There wu (my a fall- demand, but noct- cold out Inh- lucmrily._ We quote: Purl, 10 to Shock butchers', ouch. . . . Lam reach.............. dopercwt-........ f1alviu.rrsrttead..."...C. blergtlt,tt,thitr:r: on. t.pttrqort....... Heathen}: ht. Pee an. Hoe-corn ed.:..-........" ts'ows...............l= otNsohG%idiieiGis'.' .' , , , l Lift“ stock butt. per cwt.... gulch com. “eh... .....m '0rr.eiet ewes. per _,ttoftrueeu.......CClr. dihaiF.r. T.T. f f Foedm. ML..." Smelter; '00 menu than Export cutie. choice. per cwt. 8t Export mule. light. per out... 4 Butehom'cattle, picked . ..... I Buwhen' cattle. choice. ...... l me.tehert'patthviGif.r,.y.'.: , do medium....",. ..'.r...ws.. 3 khttpt-eoomrMret,idr cum... 2 gunk. expon.,::;nhvy. per at“. a u Lemon. t.pcrc ... "eo,tu.m.irhorit-Gdii .._... ..... I Butter-Large receipta good demand " 22 to 2 Etttpr--Fair receipts sold 16 to ITe for new laid. Poultrr--Laro, supply l demand. Prkea were um uemand. Prices were unchanged. Potatoes-Receipts were large and demand fairly gum. Prices ranged from 85 to 450 a but. ' Northern. ... ... .... Duluth, No. 1 Minneapolis. No. 1 Northern ... ... ... . Minneapolis, No. 1 oatar--Nine hundred babel- 001d steady at 29%0 to 30c. parlor-sixty-nv. hundred Inn-hell sold mad: at " to tmic. Rye-seven hundred bushels cold ' can. higher at G4ii to Mc. Hay and Btrat-'rwmttr loud: or hay sold " $12 to 813 a tom Md :1de of “raw at $11 a tan. hard" ... ... ... ... ..' o tre, - ~- - Toronto Farmers' Market. Whetst-Nine hundred bullish at White tall wheat sold unchanged a Tir, to T1%e, GOO bushels or red " tho same price, b'OO bunch: d can. "eadr at 69? to 6950. and a. load at Ipring at Tic. Milwaukee... ... 81:, Louis ... ... Detroit, red ... Detroit, white Duluth. No. Following are the closing quotstlonl " important wheat â€tmio‘NSJ Chieago...... ... ...... ... F---. My York... ...... ... ... -- 0 817-8 Toronto Live stock Market. Toronto Fruit Market a bag o 80 1-2 075 3-4 o 79 7-8 o 79 3-4 OTT 3-t 083 0813-4 080 "-H' ' sun-a. 2Oe; Moore. ‘iagaru. 125 to 2ae ; ban. bunctt ; a“ 250; sweet I to "tio.. a tom and a mu. made " and liberal readily " I) o " bl' O 79 7-8 0 90 1-4. go