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Durham Review (1897), 17 Jan 1901, p. 3

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ATED G Gll' MlIBrll . _. ' _ a‘ * u - ", "AK: 'T, y a ' T J . a . a.' li . ' , ., t J . tutu . HKE, S06M f, PURE. THIS ORR.u ly, to cure a disease its cause, and help get back to its habit 9122138?» for a Kt Inger mus; 30mm, '0aportunity nal Route wen States H l Provinces. highway. 1arm cure ated Free. - tsrie, d: opsy And 1. -ns 3.93%}qu formic”: V" "bertr doctor at n Berlin. He had a second toq an: up of the second nu tolhywea and " be moved by evewwhere. JW kn uipment. confidence. )Rmxm‘ssom ATW‘IA.“ same. Svatt's Ean d.. Won-u. " ' hléf‘r'ilio'i 71303. Book d tend 10 but VIC:- mscd by in. Jvantages ers relish. Tomato d tugging. have not end for hee its agreeable ll surpriu genuine has re on It, take ldom spoken ings are " lipping from all mulsion of s that; it l it don't mach mm mu. t be caused nzer Ago” Jiphtherln. .", won, work Oil, it; if not, own, of arm. about it; when and If -ii,G -thern also that what In true 'tt worldly directions ta more true in There are so many men who have all the elements of usefulness and power except one-court? It you can only under God give them that you give them everything. In Plug- trating that one word show them that every man that ever amounted to any- thing had terrific struggle. Show him what ships Decatur had to fight, and what a mountain Hannibal had to climb, and what a lame foot Walter Scott had to walk on, and that the greatest poet who ever lived-Milton-. was blind. that one of the grandest musicians of all the ages-Beethoven ---Wna deaf. and that Stewart. in some respects the greatest merchant that America ever saw. began in his small store. dining on bread and cheese be- hind the counter in a snat'ched inter- "mum between customers, he open- ing the store and closing it, sweeping it out with his own broom and being " own errand boy. Show them that Within ten minutes' walk there are stores. shops and factories. and homes where as brave deeds have been done on those of Leonidas at Thermopylae, as that of Horatius at the bridge. as that of Colon Campbell at Baiakiava. Tell them what Napoleon said to his Ital! one" when that omeer declared I certain military attempt to be im- poulble. "Impossible'." said the great commander. “Impossible is the adjec- tive of took." Why does not that old merchant, who han been 40 years in business, go Into that young merchant's store and say "Couraxe'." He needs only that one word, although. of course, you will illustrate it by telling Four own ex- perience. and how long you waited for customers. and how the first two years you lost money, and how the next year. though you did better, illness in Four household swamped the surplus with doctor's bills. Why does not that old lawyer go into that Young law- yer's office Just after he has broken down in making his first plea before a Jury and say that word with only two syllables. "Courage'." He needs only that one word. although. of course. you will illustrate it by telling him how you broke down in one ot your first cases and got laughed at by court and bar and Jury, and how Dis- raeli broke down at the start, and how hundreds of the. moat successful law- yers at the start broke down. Why do not the successful men go right away and tell those who are starting what they went through. and how their notes got protested. and what unfortunate purchases they mnde. and how they were swindied. but kept right on until they reached the golden milestone? Even some who pretend to favor the new beginner sud say they wish him well put obstacles In his How is the young merchant to com- pete with his next door bargain-maker who can afford to underseii some thing because he can more than make it up by the profit on other things. or has toiled three times and had more money otter each failure? How is that me- chnnic to make a. livelihood when there are twice as many in that trade as can in hard times and occupation? There are this very moment thousands of men who are Just starting life for themselves. and they need encourage- ment. Not long harangue, not quota- tion from profound book. not a. page. not a paragraph, but a word, one word tttly spoken. I tell you what is a great crisis in "or; man's history. It is the time when he is entering an occupation or profession. He is opposed by men in middle lite, because they do not want any more rivals. and by some of the used because they fear being crowded ott and their places being taken by younger men. Hear the often severe and unfair examinations of young inw- yers by old lawyers, of young doctors by old doctors. or young ministers by old ministers. Hear some of the old merchants talk about the young mer- chants. Trowels and hammers and scales often are jealous of new trowels and new hammers and new scales. Then " is ditt1eult to get introduced. How long a time has many a physi- cian had his Sign put out before he got a call for his services and the at- torney before he got a vase! Who wants to risk the life ot his family to ayoung physician who trot his diploma only last spring and who may not know measles from scarlatina, or to risk the obtaining of a verdict for 820,000 to an attorney who only three years ago read the first page ot Black- stone? You see the wise mun eulogises Just one word. Plenty of recognition has there been for great. orations. Cicero's arraignment ot Catiline. the philip- pics of Demosthenes. the five 'lays' usumem ot Edmund Burke against Warren Hastings, Edward Irving's discourses on the Bible and libraries full ot prolonged utterance, but my text extois the power of one word when tt refers to "a word ntly spoken." A 'tliqree basket loaded with fruit b put before us in the text. What in ordinarily translated "pictures" ought to be“baskets." Here is a. silver network basket containing ripe end golden apples, plppins or rennet; You know how such apples glow through the openings of a has- ket of silver network. You have seen ouch a. basket of fruit on many n table. It whets the appetite as well " resales the vision. Solomon wt: evidently fond ot apples. because he BO often speaks of them. While he writeo in glowing terms ot pome- grnnetel end figs and grapes and mendrekes, he seems to find solace on well as lusciousness in apples, ceiling out for a. supply of them when he lays in another place. "Comfort me with apples." Now you see the mean- ing at my text. "A word ntly spoken ll like apple) of gold in baskets ot "il- ver." Je-ter-tttteServer. '0669ooooustrss: There's a Me 969006iyur.oo.uos' . . There s a Time in Every Man's History When lit Means Help and Encouragement. 'oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.T .Wasb‘ngton report- In an. dbl spiritual directions. Call the roll of course Dr. Talmage shows an open r',','iovt'tt"imarg,'1te',', 1'.e 'll/d",',',',", 'l,',": “or . pr vate rstians rom t e me e t':rrulouyur:',t who desires to be l world began and ask them to mention ' us rates how a little I one man or woman greatly good or tlung may decide ones destiny. The i useful who was not depreciated and text is Proverbs xxv.,11 (revised ver- hailed and made a laughing stock. sion): "A word titly spoken ia like Racks and prisons and whips and ship- apples ot gold in baskets ot silver." wrecks and axes of beheadment did A filigree basket loaded with fruit their worst, yet the heroes were more b put before us in the text. What than conquerors. With such things in ordinarily translated "pictures" you will illustrate that word "cour- ought to be "baskets." Here is a age.” and they will so out from Your silver network basket containing presence to start anew and right, ripe Mid golden apples, pipplns or challenging all earth and hell to the rennets. You know how such apples combat. A Word Fitly $poken i: o o o . o a o o . 'to 0.. o00069+..u.t,0.t..t. oo o60600o f.. uuof..0 "Beware'." that will halt your friend on the wrong road as suddenly as my platoon of soldiers was ever halt- ed. Swing the red lantern ectou the week, end stop that tun: before it Too late does any warning come to such a one. But many a man now high up in usefulness and honor was stopped on the wrong road by a kindly hand put upon the shoulder and a word titly spoken. Ah, yes, fitly trpoken--that is, at the right time, with the right accentuatlon, with the right emphasis. A dicta- torial way. a condemnatory manner, a fault finding tone of voice, a man- ner which seems to say. "Look at me, and do as I do," will only make matters worse. From such a re- provai the inebriate will go but to take a drink sooner than he would have taken it, and the dissolute man a worse plunge into sin. The word of warning must be charged and surcharged with sympathy. You will practically say to the man. “I suppose you got into your present habit through overwork, and you took stimulus to keep up and do the work you must do"; or, " suppose it was through illness, and you took an intoxicant first as a medicine"; or, "You are a hail fellow well met, and you took the liquid in sociability"; or, "You were the representa- tive ot a commercial house that ex- pected you to treat customers. I understand it all. If I had been in the same circumstances, I would probably be fast in the same thral- dam." By some such alleviating in- trodnction prepare the way for 8. "Beware!" that will halt your friend on tlre with an evil habit your word of warning will have no more effect than would an address to a house on tire asking it to stop burning, no more use than a steam tug going out to help a ship after it has sunk to tho bottom of the ocean. What use in word of warning to that inebriate whose wife was dying from wounds indicted by his own hand? As he held the hand of hls dying wife he made this VON.' "Mary I will never take another glass of strong drink until I take it from this hand which I now hold." In an awful way he kept the vow, for when the wife was in her coftin he filled a 51.133 with brandy. put the glass into the dead hand. then took the glass on or her hand and drank the liquid. So also is a word of warning. A ship may sail out of harbor when the sea. has not so much as a ripple. but what a foolhardy ship company would they be that made no pro- vision tor high winds and wrathful seas. However smoothly the voyage of life may begin we will get rough weather before we harbor on the other side. and we need ever and anon to have some one uttering in most decided tones the word "be- ware." There are all the tempta- tions to make this life everything and to forget that an inch of ground in larger as compared with the whole earth than this life as compared with our eternal existence. There are all the temptations of the wine cup and the demijohn. which have taken down as grand men as this or any other century has heard of. There are all the temptations of pride and avarice and base lndu'... Renee and ungovernable temper. There is no word we all need oftener to hear than the word "beware." The trouble is that the warning word is apt to come too late. We al- low our friends to be overcome In a tlght with some evil habit before we sound an alarm. After a man is all Furthermore, a comforting word tlt- ly spoken is a beautiful thing. No one but God could give the Inventory of sick beds and bereft homes and broken hearts. We ought not to let a day pass without a visit or a letter or a. message or a prayer consolatory. You could call five minutes on your way to the factory. you could leave a half hour earlier in the afternoon and till a mission of solace. You could brighten a sick room with one Chrysanthemum. You could send your carriage and give an afternoon airing to an invalid on a neighboring street. There are four or five words which, fttly spoken, might soothe and emancipate and rescue. Go to those from whose homes Christ has taken to himself a loved one and try the word "reunion"--not under wintry sky, but in everlasting springtide: not a land where they can be struck with disease. but where the inhabitant nev- er says, "I am sick;" not a reunion that can be followed by separation,but in a place i"trom which they shall go no more out forever." For emacia- tlon and sighing, immortal health. Reunion, or, if you like the word bet- ter, anticipation. There is nothing left for them in this world. Try them with heaven. With a chapter from the great book open one of the twelve gates. Give them one note of sernphic harp, one flash from the sea of glass, one clatter of the hoofs of the horses on which victors ride. That word reunion, or anticipation, fitly spoken- well, no fruit heaped up in silver bas- kets could equal it. Of the 2,000 kinds of apples that have blessed the world not one is so mellow or so rich or so aromatic, but we take the suggestion of the text and compare that word of comfort. titly spoken, to apples of gold in baskets of silver. That word “courage” tttly spoken with compressed lips and stout grip of the hand and an intelligent fltuytt of the eye-well, the ttnest apples that ever thumped on the ground in an autumnal orchard and were placed in the most beautiful basket of silver network before keen appetites could not be more attractive. "Ott"'""'""'), oken if:, t. my When It .32 tent. é Atrue bill for manslaughter was re- yield to the Irtflue+ or the Spirit, turned by the Grand Jury at the nepentlng of and [making our sins. Carleton when in the case of Chan. and turning to him with all our O'Rellly, charged with murdering heal-ta. In. Atom-on, of Ottawa. Insaehingr.--4Jttri" is attractive tiam Lewis, the Usurer, Hus Pooled Away. London cable: Samuel Lewis. the notorious Hebrew Insurer, died to-duy at his fashionable residence, 28 Gros- venor square. He was pre-emlnently an accommodatur of the aristocracy. transacting no business with ordinary persona. He was understood to be p-rodiglously wealthy. it being traid that he had so much money he did not know what to do with it. He lived in grand style in London nun elsewhere, and entertained lavishly. He visited Monte Carlo for the pur- pose of unloading some of his super- fluous money, but complained that he was so unlucky that he made more than ho lost. Hw- once broke the brink, and distributed half of his winnings among the poor of Marseilles. He was rather proud of his muniticence to the poor. but glouted when plucking spendthrift worldlintpr. He was 68 years old. But it requires now no great strength to ring the bell. With this weak hand, yesterday formed and to-morrow turn- ed to dust, I lay hold that gospel bell in invitation to all to whom these words shall come. on whatever land or whatever sea, in high places or low., I ring out the word, "Come, come Come and have your sorrows some Come and have your wounds heal Come and have your blindness illu ined. Come and have your fatigue: rested. Come and have your soul saved. Do you not hear the very last proclamation from the heavens which the seer of Patmos was commissioned to make: "The Spirit and the bride say come, and let him that heareth say come. and let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will let him take the water of life freely!" Come and sit down at the King's banquet. Was there ever such a brilliant feast or so many royal guests? Here are the chances filled out from the breweries or earth. but with the "new wine of the kingdom." And there are the ripe, purple clusters of Eschol. and pass them around to all the banqueterre- “apples of gold in baskets of silver." "Comel" "Come!" It will not fall, as did that of Moscow. No storm can atop it. No earthquake can rock it down. When the tives of the last day blaze into the heavens, amid the crash of mountains, and the groan of dying seas. its clear, resounding voice win be heard calling to the last inhabitant of the burning planet, "Come! Come.'" The jewels of affection thrown into it at its casting by ransomed souls of earth and heaven have not weak- ened it, but made it stronger and more glorious. Evangelists and apostles rang it, and martyrs lifted their hands through the flames to give it another sounding. It will ring on until all na- tions hear it and accept its invitation, "Comel" "Come."' It will not fall. as a. man in Sing Sing Penitentiary who was considered the soul ot honor until he was 50 years of age and then com- mitted a dishonesty that startled the entire commercial world. I was on a ship crossing the Atlantic, and all went well from the time we left Liverpool until within a few hours of New York, when, because of some defect of com- pass or some lack of fidelity on the part of those responsible, the Nan- tucket lighthouse suddenly warned us that we were driving straight for the rocks, and the vessel turned in time to save the ship and the hundreds of passengers and crew. And many a man has got nearly through the voy- age of lite in safety and then gone in- to the breakers. So you had better not hold your chin too high. as though you were forever independent of all moral l disaster. Better, in the way you pro- nounce your word ot warning to those astray, indicate that you yourself have weaknesses that may yet fling you down unless God help you and that You realise there may be temptations ahead with which you will find it as hard to grapple as the temptations with which that man is grappling. The chief baker in prison in Phtus. aoh’s time saw in a dream something quite different from apples of gold in baskets of silver, for he said to Joseph, "I also was in a dream, and, behold, I had three white baskets 1n my head, and in the uppermost basket there was all manner of baked ments tor Pharaoh, and the birds did eat them out ot the baskets of my head.” Joseph interpreted the dream and said it meant that the chief baker should be beheaded and the birds would eat his flesh. Bo many a man has in his own bad habits omens of evil that peck at him and foretell doom end death. But, oh, the power of that word "Come" when arlght uttered'. We do well when we send the young into schools and colleges and theo- logical seminaries, and by nine years of instruction and drill hope to prepare them to sound aright that sweet and enrapturing and heaven descended word "Come." The gospel we be- lieve in is a gospel of "Come." That word speak all the churches. That word is now building thrones for conquerors and burnished Coroners for kings and queens. That word is to sound so clearly and impres- sively and divinely, that the day is advancing when all nations will re- respond, "We come! We come'." And while the upper steps toward God and heaven will be thronged with redeemed souls ascending there will not be one solitary traveler on the road of sin and death. In the Kremlin at Moscow, Russia, is what is called the "king of bells," but. it is a ruined bell, and it Has rung no sound for nearly 200 years. It is 67 feet in circumference, and in height it is more than ten times the height of the average man, and it took a score of men to swing its brazen tongue. It weighs 200 tons. On June 19, 1706, in a. great fire, it tell and broke. On it are figures in relief representing czar and empress and Christ and Mary and the evangelists. Besides that, you had better be merciful ln your word of warnlng. where ahead ot you a temptation so mighty that unless you have sympa- thetic treatment you may go under. "Oh, no," says some one, "I am too old for that." How old are you?" "Oh," you say, "I have been so long in active business life that I am clear Past the latitude ot danger." There is for the day may come when you may need some one to be lenient and ex- Cutrtstory to you. There may be some- reaches the chasm.' MODERN S" YLOCK DIES. as. If I be lifted up-On the cm as qxplained in the next verso. Will draw-After I have died and risen again.' Christ draws, but we must yield to the influences of the Spirit, mmentintr of and {making our sins. and flux-nine to him with all our at. Now-ht this very time, is the Judgment-Or, the crisis. Now " shall be determined who shall rule the world." The prluoe of thls world .-Btttam Be cast mgt--43atrt out ot his position; 99mm._ _- power to come to the cross. and by bringing him forth from the grave. 80. Not because of me-Note to pm; I aol 'am uuuuoo ao 1101143119435 no doubts about my course. For your mures---ProbaNy as " proof to the Greeks who had desired to see him. that he was the Messiah. 28. Glorify thy mtme-"By the Name of God is understood himself in all hie attributes; his wisdom, truth, justice, mercy, holiness, which are nil abundantly glorified by Christ’s death." The prayer is. Father, glorify thyself. at whatever cost to me, A voice from heaven-Title was tha third time the Father had spoken from heaven. See Matt.iti. IT; Luke ix. 85. I have......mnd will glorify it-The Father had glorified his name by giving him power to accomplish his mission thus tar, and he would continue to glorify It by giving him 27. My soul trolml-Chritrt had Fa. rious forombos or his passion before He fully entered into it: already hie soul was beginning to be exceeding mrmwful. What shall I tmr-What shall my prayer be to my Father? Save me from this hour-Thi:, should be read as a question, “wording to the Revised Version. margin. tho request of thv Greoks. Where anr--Where I shall shortly take up mlno ulndv, (won in the eternal king- dom of my Fathryr.---Bomem. There trhuail also my servant be-In the same state of happiness and glory. Will my Father honor-Ho. will be honored with his Mastxrr; made tt partnker of tho joys and rewards of the one he served. 26. Serve luv-Christ is a master in a two-fold Manse; He inwtrut-ts men. and appoints tlmm their work. He who wishes to serve Christ must he- come a disciple to be taught. and a servant to otm'y.--Clurko. Let him ollow me-Let him act out the "have irlm'lple, as Christ had done, and was bout to do. This is Christ‘s ttttrover 2h. Loveth his lilo-The word trans- lated lite is often translated soul, as in warm 27. The mwtning is that he who makes the pleasures, honors and rewards of this life his chin! concern. and tracririrws rightxrousrnrss and in. togrity in order to obtain them, tghall lose it-Shall lose in most vases even tho Earthly rewanka‘ that ho hoped to gain, and shall [use his soul eter. nally. That lmteth his lint-Ott the other hand, he who sacrifices, when mmry. all worldly goods for Chrlst'a sake and the gospel“; (Mark viil. 35), shall keep it-shall gain etm'- nal life. "The loss ls temporal, the gain is eternal; tho Imus is small, tho gain infinite"; the loss is of outward things, tho gain is the soul ltsvlf, which is of Infinitely greater value than all earthly proud. 24. Verify, verily - “was words were maul to emphasize some great and Important truth,. He now pro- ceeds to show how the ttloritieation of the Son of main would be accom- plishpd. A ctrrrt--A grain. Into the ground and dire-Jambi uses a very familiar illustration. The seal must. die in order to liberate the lite-germ within it and allow it to Deanne fruitful. It the seed is not put into the grouind it “abideth alarm." Much truit--"The result of Christ’s death is a great spiritual 'luurvcurt--ts glor- 1mm harvest of humanity rescued trom death and the grave onto eter- nal life." The germ of life eternal en- ters Into the hearts of those mnited 1o_Him by faith. G od . 22. Andrew and Philip-How pleas- ing to God is this onion, when the ministers of the Gospel agree and unite together to bring souls to Christ. But where self-love prevails. and the honor thmt comes from God is not snug-hit. this union never exists. Bigotry often mine every generous sentiment among the different nominations of the people ot God. 23. Jesus answered them-Our Lord spake primarily to the Greeks, and secondarily to Hie disciples. (1) of the meaning of His impending death, (2) of the necessity of faithfulness to Him in it, (3) of the blessing nt- taehed thereto-Eirwheun. The hour-The time. Should be ttloriried -The time has come when the old prophecies are to, be ntlfilied, the Mmla‘h’s kingdom in to. be not up in the whole earth, and Christ is to thine His place on the right hand Ot 21. Come theretore to 1'hulir-1t is not known why they Should come to Philip first unless it was because they had had some slight acquaintance with him. "Philip and Andrew are Greek norms and the only ones of Greek origin among the disciples." It is supposed that these Greeks, came either from syro-1'uoenici" or Deen- polia. Bethsuldu of Gnliieu-Tht, Leth- l'iida, situated near Capernaum. in Galilee. was Philip's native town. De- sired Him-Jesus was in the court of tho women, where He had just beheld the poor widow exist two mites into the treasury. The Greeks were not allowed to entvr this court. hence the necessity of sending word to Christ and asking him to time out into the court of the he-Ithen. We would see Jmnur-Not merely to see His face. but we would spe Ik with Him and be taught by Him. " should be the de- Mttot. eyery heart to see Christ. 20. Certain Ureeke--The original word "Reliance" meal" persons of Greek nationality, born Gentiles of the Greek race. They may have come from Greece. or trom some of the Greek cities nearer by, of which there were several in Dceapolis. Came up to worship-These Greeks were. prose- lytes to the Jewish religion. That they acknowledged the true God is evident, but it is not certain that they had been circumcised. Greeks Seeking Jeerus.-John 12:1)‘33. Commentary-Connecting Links. On Tum morning Jesus and His uls- ctples aguxn returned to Jerusalem from Bethany. On the way Peter called attention to the fig tree which bud been cursed on the previous morn- mg (Mark XL, 30-21). and Jesus took occasion to give them u. lesson in faith. The day was a busy one and was put tn teaching in the temple. _ SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON N0. Ill. JANUARY 20, 1901. The Mayor, deemed touched at tttmatte our the emblem at omoe. Ottawa, Jan. 13.-Mayor Payment, in handing over the chair of office yesterday to the City Clerk. after he had officiated at the. reception ot the soldiers. sum; as he kins-ad the coat-ot-arms, "Boys, this is the lent time I will ever wear that chain, and as a goo) Catholic some- timu kine- the crucifix at his breast. , kiss tltitr,. hoping as I do, that no in true British lubhct mm I am my ever wear it." As ttrr door owned the happy parent. ran in with arms wile open. Throw- ing tru. am" about her father's neck and dropping her head upon Ills big shoulder, she sobbed happily-and Mm. De Peyuter shut the door. Tiny will leave Gr AIrnouiLurmor mw morning at 9 o'clock. Nine years ln prison Ind failed to quench her pride. With eyes brim- ming, biting her lips hard for welt-con- trol. the girl waited for some token of tenderness on the part of the father. Mrs De Peyster opened tho door, and Annie, in a black amass. very plainly made. and with her flowing brown hair brushed Lghtly back, stood, looyng very pretty. but pale and ngl- tated, in tha, centre of the mom. "She was sentmmml for me, um! after she had been in the prison for a. time we went over to see her. I went back home an} I stopped preach- ing. and went to work at my trade as a cobbler. It was the wrecking of my life, but it is all over now. She ls going back with me, bless her. " Wife hm six dill-lime that she was fattenin. [for market. They will be killed and cooked. I have asked our ne‘gthbors to slim-9 our Yrs." Tho hotel was now reached and the tathor went upstalrs. "it was long before we heard u! her. Then we found she WM in Phil- :uiolphin. We went there, but We had gone to Vow York. ouvo "tutr that we mm" homo. Tin-n camp the shout,- ing of tho 11ml. b'lte luul married that horse-racing tollow mu] he was abus- ing Mfr. and om" night Rho shot. him. Tho next morning the Sunday pa- pers hm! it all. Then we got a let. ter from Annie, written in the 'Nmbtr, begging us not to go to New York. "Amm- haul a quick temper, and it mums natural for everyone m ltumor her. At 17 she was the handsoun-st woman of her age, or any other. in Alum-din. She had " down lovers, honest country fellows, all of them. We new" knew who it was that mm her away from home, but We know that. it was hum of them. It was some city "harp. "Annie has been wnumutly in my mind. Tutmlay. when I got back from the More and into the hon-w I But dumn to read a paper. After a little my eye caught the line 'Annie Walden Pardoaed.' I sat. up straight.’ "'Wire,' I said. 'look here.‘ Sh» camu and tell tn the floor In a taint, but my; straiglitway up and laugh- ing and crying all at once. a» happy Was she. t A TOUCHING LIFE STORY tts patadon MM His glory are in." pu- ably interwoven. If Ho shrinkn and tails 10 con umm-nt- ms an t rinrs. :.|! is lost. an far (In wo mu couceruui. Tha shadow of tho cross strikes terror to His humanity, and ton a mailman He seems perplexed: but only tor a, mo- ment. He was Hie mission. and. thunk His dear name. Wiihmt waverrgt, pur- sues it to its cortstimmatrorL Thr true servants ot God are willlng to be pre- trent with Him in naivereity and persecnbfon, and share “in sufferings as well as we glory. Signs and wonders do not usually convince where ordinary means (all; "They have Moses and the prophets. let them hear than." " in one or the delusions of the race that if some- thing out of the ordinary could be hm] to convince the people, they would believe. "Could not believe!" It would seem in the cane ot them: Jews that they had inherited, through ages ot rebellion and untw- lief. a moral impotitribility; misusing divine revelation a.nd grace so long. they had become ineapable of using: them. We cannot, however, avoid our personal rvuponsibility before God, or nhiit tlu, burden of it from our shoulders to his. New York despatch _ Tho Imppiwtl man in NW York nutty was Itev.l l'hillip Graham, tho “L'ulmler Prom-h- I or," of Almedia, Pa., who had come I to the city to meet nu; unuguur.’ Annie Walden. who was Immune! by t Governor Itooseveit on Monday. Ttut years ugu she murdered lwr haw‘ band and had been in prison eu-rl since. and by hi: own loveliness lea-is men to himself. " we desire the life of Christ in the soul we must die the death to lln and sell. The one who forsake all for Christ. will receive all from Christ. Wluet Jesus Was houbled he went to his Futher; when we are trmnhied We should go to the Father. through Christ. It we lift up Christ by magnifying hint in our lives. he will, through us, draw may to him". PRherrc) SURVEY. We do not know wim. it Wis that animated thine Gm ks to ask to son Jesus; perhips it was curiosity, or possibly a mixturo of curiosity and real spiritual yearning. We do know that the World's giant need is to my. Jesus, nnd that rur'osity has often resulted in the mimtiuzi oi the troul. He ls willing to h" w ueht, Ho is "lwuys tuwtwstbkr, He never him-s himself l ruin tlttfrtr'y needy. All men shall be drawn untohim. tor he has been lifted up in the some.) he referred to, but we are not to supp-Joe all men will yield to that drawing and come to him. "is words cannot mean that all will be savml, for my one has observed. many are lost already and there will be many at the Inst day ot whom he' will my. "Depart trom me, ye workers of in.. iqulty." We cannot emphasize too strongly the great necessity of im- proving our opportunities. "Yes. I am aftvr my daughter, Annie." he said, in umwar to the question of a reporter. “who is at the Endicott Hotel in the aunt-1- menu, of Mrs. Iteelrman be l'eysu-r. [WE (rlfll'il?i1ii'llW Father Hastens to Welcome Pardoned Murderess. HU sanctity}; and death are the Iyte'mde to His trlory and emanation. 30sor Paymem's Loyalty. {or lito. nnd the prison tor to see her. I ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Kingston, Jan. 14.--3ohn Clo...- han, urber of 0111' of ft. " 2ttrerb bread wagons. had the bones ot one leg broken m two plum. lie Ind been delivering: broad when the rig upset. In atuunptiug to stop the home. Cinnalttrn gut tangled up in the rig. the mam". biting the breaking ot we bones of his leg. He succeeded in bringing the horse: to n. “and.“ saving the rig from domolitmn. but was unable to extricate hill-elf, and was obliged to romuin lying on the [men ground tor a long thot, before med. The Anchor line steamer Ethic ias. which wmltu;lioear'Duarriy m 'at Hand. In the Firth of Clyde. ha- been floated. and has return“ i) Ontario guubm' H. 'i'.'" l mm. Calumbm Nova Seaman“ . Manitoba 'r..____ New Brurvoviek.. P. E. Inlandmm l M "'%"i'e%f'9" A-wwnn MIR) mvotvod " wutihouro, to tlu' vxv cunt of $850000. and mum- rinnnvial concerns, linking: tlw [use outside or mnnurnrturirut and trading much larger thnn rustemur). A vanitulist " Tttttroavrsr ulsi, sunlwndc-d. with an Indebtedness of $277000. Thi tow thremr- mat-s awe-ll Um total and nuke the tnble ammu- wurr than tho normal default" warrnnt. In many whys tho your 1900 was new» daily tree from mmortuno and col- lidvrlng the 'N?vetN.' loss to wheat grown-I In Manitoba. that Province makm a aplendld exhibit. At the (was! (4th Um past wm-k tltere has bvert nn impnwvnwnt in paymtmtet, This is a matter ttttteh complained of fur stun“ weeks, past. At Ottawa this week lumim-ss ha- been u trifle quid. "A it always In at large cvntrws immwllutely after the holiday season. (.‘uuudlnn Failures. (From Dunn's Ilrview, Jun. G, mum Canadian failures during the your 1900 wore 1,355 in numlwr and 'tle 613308 In nmuunt "r liaxbilitim slightly oxcemiiug the two precmtintr yours. but ronmnring must. luvornbl; with the tour years prior to 1898. Banking defaults were smaller in an} ount than in 1899, but double in num- lxr. Luat yonr‘s "word was unusu- ally satisfactory at must pointri, and the genvrnl condition of buxllwsu Wm.- prospérouu; tlw prim‘ipll cumu- or in- crmutted Iiubilitios ht-lng located nt Montreal, “then- u trader in produce failed for $830.000. and a butter mubt tor $200,00W. This aiitriculty Newttd, Toronto Farmer.' Marker Jan. 6.--orrerirrr," of gram an (iv unmet. tuarket Umiay Wort- mutt-t- nwly largo, umountlng ("2,400 husk ele. Prices of when. were (under. barley was nrmer, and on“ and rye were cloudy. Wheat.-'Pwes hundred hut-hols o! wh to and 600 budwla' of red SUM I '.K. lower at 89 to 610 1.30.. and 400 bu.tr ads of goos! Mandy at (M 1-30. Barley-Foe hundred bushels sold lc. higher at 41 1-2 to 44c. Ive-one loud and unulnugvd at G:.'. 1-212 per hu:lr*l. oau.-Bix hundred luwlwls Hold un- changed at 1:91-21 to 3013242 Hay and Brraw--Hay wax a little firmer. twenty loads selling at 500. h‘gher at $12.50 to $13.5" p-r ton. Straw was wuaker, the loads idling " luwur at. $10 per ton. Dream Heqot--hSarkwt, (‘0!!!th strong and print: an night-r. The otreringe one small and than: in u. km" demand. Quotations' now rung»- from $7.75 to " per "wt. ChYago ... ... ... ... sNew York... ... ._. ... Milwaukee... ... ... ... St. Louis ... ... mp. ... Toledo ... ... ... ._. '.. Down. red... .. ... Detroit. white ... ... Duluth, No. 1 north- "re em ... ... ... ... ... or3aa 0785-8 Minneapolis, No. 1 north-ren ... ... ... --.-. 07834-8 Following are the closing quota- tions at important wheat contra to- day: Chicago ..' New York than are tiieo hwor. awning " T to 31-20. Otter fowl are unvhuuged. Bradshaw's on Trude. The unlwnml opinion ammng the nttututttctar- and the whole-ml» trade at Muntrml in: mint the 31-4" Juart closed has been mninenll; amt- irttu'tory an rogm‘dn the volume " luminvss done and the prelim made. Shipments of spring; K “alas-haw: be- glm. Values curlinu" firm ba. may“ lines of impurtul and dnmmtio moth". Money is in and demand and nrm bonding Wheat Mun-ken. FolloWEng un- m- cusing (mutations at important What centres to-day- Uttrit. May. ctueago ... ... ... m.. -- $0 " L2 Tolmlo ...... .... Detroit, rod . Detroit, whim, At Winnipeg there has been a in" inquiry for spring stuff this week. There has born a fair business done for the mst Week (If the gear at! London. is Provinces. Total 1”) The Markets Innis Entanglvd In the “'ugon. IEO.) tNt P."' [897 ISM! LW 2.118 If!" 1.3.36 L355 13387 l 'onnm-rcitu No. Huh. 5m "5 m m " " Cash tt t,tit3.Mt, 10.6.3.6?!) 9,528 .323 l f, 1,5tah 17. $9.05 15.m.m 1Mttk2" New. Phe.) Huh. No. In: 2.882.063 l ' 275 - l m 975.” t rn 122.053 LSHJN $0 77 0710 u nu 1.4 (I til let UNI UH: 510.1!“ 2‘01107 171.831 101%? ttdoo 87, N new 0 TO 1:4 It N: " 33 trt, $0795 (I ttah 0 TTS u My, 0 845 5l2.307 LU.' tto 211m mam traunt 27:3 W1 '34.," 277.“ ty

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