Emulsion of Cod Liver he readies: cure for t," unless it comes of g no work-you can't ell ,nd strong, without d under-digestion. over-work, if you can ether you can or not, tt's Emulsion of Cod il, to balance yourself rwork. You can'tlive rue-but, by it, rem en's a limit, however, forit. ulna has re on It. then ave not send for lo. Its a- tasto will ou. BOWNE lsts. care many causes ofges ro thin; they all come hese two heads: over- Woronto ight, if you are too {as wrong, if too thin already. enough for your habit, i. r; a little more, or less, is t harm. Too fat. consult G too thin, persistently a matter what cause, take Emulsion of Cod Live! Matting Thin LSUE N0. 4 1901 I Fo ‘RIMONIAL. $1.00; all drlharuu. HR... ' Why P" 'Yoq? " G w l DROPSY M PURE Stjohlt litllutn - - . Treated Free. â€â€˜ "W1" â€mow and!“ "yl'rTotrttiriaiiyTa Mm". Quick ""01. nuriz rm“; Boot oe “Mm and IO In}. mzmz the no?! ran '1th 'ot.rentrla. AL." and In“, CLONES IRlllill "ammo. Sent on Trial iRl-I lax-990m ATLANTA. aa. EG. waif; m rkcl. A "U,ty. " For “In. ll , \‘ClRY uni 1hr! -. me. In . " Hi I my you red. No "Idle " "tttttttrd. 0!" 111R “Hm at l _HALF price. lo . tyr, mud. to run I do " than ~Mn. " Ma; on. tt lets. Pt h nuis- Ivu no 11-min for to D nil " W Dur- of I want you to understand, all you the arr tolling for Christ. that the castles of sin the all going to be Cdmural. The Victory for christ tn these great towns is ttoirttt to be so complete that not 8 man on earth or an angel in heaven or a devil in he" will dispute It. How do I know it? I know " jut .8 certainly as God lives and that this 3 the holy truth. The old Bible " full of it. The nation II to he u" ed; of course. an the emu m to h and. It makes a man difNgenee) t know there are eon-rows and “here are sins and there are nutter- 1-189 all around us. but in some bitter oold winter day when we are thrashing our arms around In to keep our thumbs from freezing we think of the warm spring day that will after awhile come. or in the dark winter night we look up and we see the northern lights. the win- down of heaven lilumined by some Ire-at victory, Just so we tooh up from the night of suffering and sor- row and wretchedness in our cities, and we see a light uremia! through from the other IMO. and we know we are on the - to morning-more than that, on the 'Pr to the “morning without clouds." l tt. xsumullls Impressed his life upon Home. The Pilgrim Fathers will never relax their grasp from New England. William Penn left a. legacy of fair dealing and integrity to Phil- arielphia, and you can now any day. on the streets of that city, see " vustonu. his manners, his morals, his hat. his wife's bonnet and his meeting house. So the Hollanders. founding Now York. left their Impression on all the following gener- ations. So this capital of the nation is a perpetual eulogy upon the Wash- ington who founded it. i thank God for the place ot our 'esidenve. and while there are a thousand things that ought to be "orrerted and many wrong: that might, to ho mn-rthrown. while I thank God for the past. I look tor- 'vard this morning to a glorious fu- 'ure. I think we ought-and I take it for granted you are all interested in this great work of evangelialng Ihr' cities and saving the world-we ought to toil with the sunlight in our faces. We are not tftthtintr in a miserable Bull Run ot defeat. We are on the way to thtttl victory. We are not following the rider on the black horse. leading us down to death and darkness and doom, but ‘he rider on the white home. with the moon under his feet and the our: of heaven for his tiers. Matt. Con- queror. hall! "What mean thing have you been doing there? What outrageous thing have you been guilty of that you do not like the place?" Every city is influenced by the rharacter of the men who founded it. Romulus impressed his life upon Home. The Pilerim Fathom will Pulpit and printing press for the most part in our day sre busy in discussing the condition of the cities at this time. but would it not be healthfully encouraging to all Chris- tian workers and to all who are toll- ing to make the world better it we should this morning for a. little while look forward to the time when our cities shall be revolutionised by the gospel of the Son of God and all the darknes of sin and trouble and crime and suffering shall be gone from the sky and it shall be "a morning without clouds'?" I have noticed that a man never likes . city where he has not behaved well. People who have s. free ride in the prison van never like the city that furnishes the vehicle. When I find Argos and Rhodes and Smyrna. trying to prove themselvesi the birthplace of Homer, I conclude l right sway that Homer behaved 1 well. He liked tin-m and they liked l him. We must not war on laudable I city pride or with the idea of build- i Ing ourselves up ttt any time to try , to pull others down. Boston must, continue to point to its Faneuil hall _ and to its superior educational aid-3 vantages. Philadelphia must continue l to point to its independence hall) and its mint and ira Girard college. i va York must continue to exult in _ its matchless harbor and its vast] population and its institutions oti, merry and its ever-widetiintr com-i men-e. Washington must continue 1 to rejoice in the fact that it is the 1 most beautiful city under the sun. i if I should find a. man coming from any city having no pride in, that city. that city having been the: place of his nativity or now being the place of his residence. I would i feel like making him right away: , "What do you expect of thh new century?" is the question often eeked or me, end meny others heve been plied with the eeme inquiry. In the min of invention I expect some- thing as startling es the telegreph and the telephone and the x rey. In the realm ot poetry I expect ea greet poets as Longfellow end Tennyson. In the realm of medicine I expect the cure of cancer end consumption. In the reeim of religion I expect more then one Pentecost litre that at 1857. when 500.000 souls professed to have been converted. I expect that uni- verse! peece will reign end that be- fore the errlvai of the two thous- andth year gunpowder will be out of use except for blasting rocks or pyrotechnic entertainment. I expect that before the new century hes ex- pired the millennium will be fully in- l nutturated. The twentieth century l will be es much en improvement on the nineteenth century as the i1iiii teenth century was an improvement on the eighteenth. But the conven- tional length of sermonic discourse will eiiow us only time for one hopefui consideration. and that will he the redemption of the cities. "_-"--- - - - - Dr. Tamale toll. â€nothing of what he expects the next hundred years will nchleve and declnres that the outlook ttt moat Inspiring. Text, " Samuel. xxlll., 4: "A morning with- out clouds." A ‘7th mt,- nurse Dr. aim... 2,',PuP1ty.w tion of the cities vould It not be ing to all Chrls~ all who are toil- In that day of which I speak do you believe that there will be any midnight carousel? Will there be an: new: In many of the churches of Christ in our day the music is simply a mockery. I have not a cultivated ear nor a cultivated voice, yet no man can do my singing for me. I have nothing to any against artistic music. The $2 or tr, I pay to hear one of the great queens of song is a good invest- ment. But when the people assemble in religious convocation and the hymn is read and the angels of God step from their throne to catch the music on their wings, do not let us drive them away by our indifference. I have preached in churches where vast , sums of money were employed to keep iup the music, and it was as exquisite l ias any heard on earth. but I thought at the same time, for all matters prac- tical. I would prefer the hearty. out- breaking song of ar backwoods Meth- odist camp meeting. In that time also of which I speak all the haunts of iniquity and crime and squalor will be cleansed and will be illumined. How Is it to be done? You say perhaps by one tnftuence. Per- haps I say by another. I will tell you what is my idea. and I know I am rtttttt in it. The gospel of the Son of God is the only agency that will ever accom- plish this. In our great cities the churches are not to-day large enough to hold more than a fourth ot the population. The 'churches that are built-comparative- , ly few of them are fully occupied. The average attendance in the churches of the United States to-day is not 400. Now, in the glorious time or which I speak, there are going to be vast churches, and they are going to be all thronged ulth worshippers. Oh, what rousing songs they will sing! Oh. what earnest sermons they will 1ifiiir. Oh. what. earnest prayers gthey will utter! Now. in our time, what is milled a fashionable church is a place where a tow people, having attended very carefully to their toilet. come and sit 'town-they do not want i to be crowded, they litre a whole seat to themselves-and then. It they have I any time left from thinking of their, store. and from examining the style of the hat in front of them, they sit and listen to a sermon warranted to hit no man's sins and listen to music which is rendered by a choir warrant- ed to sing tunes that nobody knows. And then after an hour and a half ot indolent yawning they go home re- freshed. Every man feels better af- ter he has a sleep. In that better time also coming to these cities the churches of Christ will be more numerous. and they will be larger, and they will be more devoted to the service of Jesus Christ, andi they wlll accomplish greater influences l for good. Now it is often the case that churches are envious of each’ other, and denominations collide with: each other. and even ministers of, Christ sometimes forget the bond of- brotherhood, but in the time ot which I I speak. while there will be Just as] many differences ot opinion as there) are now, there will be no acerbity. no ', hypercritlcism. no exclusiveness. I In that day ot which I speak taxes will be 1 mere nothing. Now our business men are taxed tor everything. City taxes. county taxes, state taxes, United Ststel taxes, stamp taxes, license taxes, manufacturing taxes-tturea, taxes, taxes! Our business men have to make a. small fortune every year to pay their taxes. What fastens on our great industries this awful loud? Crime, individual and omcisl. We have to pay the board of the villains [who are incarcerated in our prisons. We have to take care ot the orphsns of those who plunged into their graves through beastly indulgence. We have to support the municipal (fovernments, which are expensive fjust in proportion as the criminal l proolivities are vast and tremendous. "Vito supports the almshouses and police stations and all the machinery to! municipal government? The tax- payers. 3 But in the glorious time of. which1 .1 speak grievous taxation will all have censrxi. There will be no need of supporting criminals. There will he no criminals. Virtue will have taken the place of vice. There will be no "whim usylums. for parents will be unit- to leave a r‘ompetence to thnir children. There will be no voting of large sums of moneys for some municipal improvement, which moneys. before they get to the im- I movement. drop into the pockets of f those who toted them. No oyer and I ttetuniner io-pt up at vast expensel‘ to the people. No impanellng of dur- , ies to try theft and arson and murder and slander and blackmail. Better fac- tories, grander architecture, liner euuipage, larger fortunes, richer opu- lence---"a morning without clouds.' ness will be purified there will be no enterprise. There is no ground tor such an absurd anticipation. In the time of which I speak, where now one fortune is made there will be a hundred fortunes made. We all know business prosperity depends upon conMenee between man and man. Now, when that time comes ot which 1 speak, and all double dealing, all dishonesty, and all fraud are gone out of commercial circles, thorough confidence will be established. and there will be better business done and larger fortunes gathered and mightier successes achieved. ,,._ -vv... up unvv l morbid idea ot the millennium, and they think when the better time comes to our cities and the world people will give their time up to psalm singing and the relating ot their religious experience, and " all social life will be purified there will be no hilarity. and " en busi- - ,. "'_"__N. - unyuuy. Now, in this municipal elevation of which I speak, I have to remark there will be greater ttnanetat proa- perity than our cities hnv. nun- with you 1nd with me whether we are tolling on towards a. defeat or tolling on toward 1 victor-v Some people our eme- hnvo over people seem to htve a of the millennium, and Wire-We must have M153 Sheech and Mr. Bellow from the choir to help entertain those frlends of Juan to. night. Hasband-Mmtt assuredly not. Wigs-Why not? You said they were musical people. Bt-tttsod-That':, why, exactly. into the car and traid--- "Umpty bar auwl’ "What street did you say?" tiemtrnderd the Imenger. “Ufty- umpthl" said the conductor. Much tuusoyed, the lady from the suburb went out on the platform and re- baked the mnductor for his careless we ot the vocal organs. He only glared at her and mid- "What do you expect tor $3 a week? A tenor solo t" A Indy who was unlamillar with the streets of New York was much confumd by the Jargon used by a car conductor. Whom she thought she must have arrived near her destina. tion the conductor poked his head I I know that sometimes it seems a hopeless task. You toil on in differ- ‘Ient spheres. sometimes with Great Idiscouragement. People have no faith iand say: "It does not amount to any- Ithing. You might as well quit that." Why, when Moses stretched his rod [over the Red sea, it did not seem to I mean anything especially. People came lout, I suppose, and said. "Aha!" Some of them found out what he wanted to Ida. He wanted the Bea parted. It did (not amount to anything, this stretch- iing out of his hand over the sea. But {after a while the wind blew all night Ifrom the east, and the waters were irr1tt.rtt into a glittering Palisade on (either side, and the billows reared as‘ ,God pulled back on their crystal bits. (Wheel into line. o Israel! March. 'march! Pearls crushed under feet. lFiying spray gathers into rainbow iarch of victory for the conquerors to gmarch under. Shout of hosts on the {beach answering the shout of hosts amid Bea. And when the last line of the Israelites reach the beach, the cymbals clap, and the shields clang. and the waters rush over the pursu- ;ers. and the swift fingered winds on ‘the white keys of the foam play the grand march of Israel delivered, and the awful dirge of Egyptian over- throw. U of the ditch of his abominations, cry- ing for mercy, He will be an all par- donlng Redeemer. The rocks will turn gray with age, the forests will be unmoored in the hurricane, the sun will shut its tiery eyelid, the stars will drop like blasted turs, the sea. will heave its last groan and lash it- self in expiring agony, the continents will drop like anchors in the deep, (the world will wrap itself in sheet _ of tlame, and leap on the funeral pyre ot the judgment day, but God's love will never din. It shall kindle its suns after all other lights have gone out. It will be a billowing sea after all other oceans have wept themselves away. It will warm itself by the blaze of a consuming world. It will sing while the archangel’s trumpet Peale and the air is filled with the crash ot breaking sepulchers and the rush of the rising dead. Oh, com- mend that love to all the cities, and the morning without clouds will come! l Unreasonable Expectations. God's love will yet bring back this ruined world to hollness and happi- ness. An infinite Father bends over it in sympathy. And to the orphan He will be a. father, and to the widow He will be ahusband, and to the outcast He wlll be a home, and to the poorest wretch that to-day crawls out is the Church of God going to be, or are good men going to be. The streets are going to be filled with regenerated populations. Three hun- dred and sixty bells ran: in Moscow when one prince was married, but when Righteousness and Peace kiss each other in all the earth ten thous- and times ten thousand bells shall strike the Jubilee. Poverty enriched. Hunger fed. Crime purified. Ignor- ance enlightened. All the cities sav- ed. Is not this a cause worth work- ing in? -. ____--, -..~vu-wu .a0G"Wnr Will there be any hiuphemies in the Street? Will there be eny inehrletu “entering post? No. No wins stores. no lager beer saloons, no breweries Where they mete the three X's. no blood-hot ere, no bloated cheek. no instruments of min and destruction. no tut pounded forehead. The grand- children of that women who goes down the street with e curse, stoned by the boys that follow her, will be the reformers end philanthropists end the Christian men and the honest merchents ot our greet cities. Who ere those wretched women ta- ;ken up for drunkenness end carried up to the 'courts, and put in prison, of course? What will you do with the nonhops that made them ( drink? Nothing. Who are those ‘ prisoners in Jail? One of them stole a pair of shoes. That boy stole a dol- lar. This girl snatched a purse. All ot them crimes damaging society less than " or 83. But whet will you do with the gambler who last night robbed the young man of 81,000? Nothing. What shall be done with that one who breaks through end destroys the purity of a Christian home and with an adroitness and Pertidy that beats the strategy of Why Me Wanted Them. on from marble new of shivering Manama? Will there be In! an- wuhed, mated. uncombed children? In“ A. ___ . 7 Chrlst’u doctrine proved. He show- ed that the great commandment “could not be the judicial laws now that the people of the Jews to whom they pertained were Mr little; not the ceremonial laws now that they omf tyranny 31162655613113 - iiiiG for. w. trlumph'of truth. 45. How is Bo His 6'im--He is Dom! in His divine relation to David, and Ben as to His humanity. 48. To answer Him tb word-Not a mam was able to reply; they simply had nothing to ca)" neither durst they ask Him any more questions. PRACTICAL SURVEY. . Christ’s Judgment tested. Our Lord had Just previously put the Sad- dncees to silence. The Pharisees new gathered together. not to express their gratitude to Him tor having confirmed the truth against the Sad- ducees. who Were the common ene- mies of their religion, but rather to secure the name of puzzling Him who had puzzled the Sadduceee. Rather were they more annoyed at Christ’s victory than pleased that the doe.. trine ot the resurrection and a. tu- ture state which Alte Swdducees op- posed had been upheld by Christ. They were more concerned for their I mien thy tootsttrcr-God proposes to subdue the enemies of Christ. both Jews and Gentiles, and cause them to acknowledge their soverelgn and f......l was (v. 4.77, It the Messiah in to be David's son, as you Bay, how than can he be David‘s Lord? Jesus did not uosire to emulate them, but his purpose was to instruct them. He was taruinv; their minds away from intricate questions about the law to Christ. the Son of God. David's Lord. 44. The Lard 'saith-Jesus quotes from Psa. ex. 1. That Is. Jehovah saith. Unto my Io-ri-unto David's Lord, or Christ. Mit thott-Jehovah here gives Christ the place of the greatest eminence and authority, at Hie on.“ right hand. Thine ene- l I'...'. What thimi yo of Christ? Whose son is lie-VNU was an easy question and was answered very readily. The question is still per- tinent: What think "ye" orChrlst? --As to his claims to dixinity ? Wushe the ideal. sininss Man; the pattern of the race l' The son of Davisr---Itwae a fact well known and universally neknowlaigcd among the Jews that the Messiah was to sprim,r from the family of David. The expression, The sun of Oavid, to " Jew, meant the Messiah. 43. How then doth David-He asks another question which Is not so easily explainul. In spirit-Under the inspiration or tho Holy Spirit David had milled Christ “Lord. The question law. I. Tim i. 5. 41. were....:...-------, this interview, while Jesus was still teach. ing in the temple. Jesus asked them-- Tht-y had been asking him many ques- tions and had tried to entangle him in his talk, and now: he, in turn, ask: them a question: ,uuuquu m we mart. from which flows the ‘golden rule' in practice. and the perfect, keeping of all the t'omtn:utdmcnte, which rvier to our duties to our fellow-men." 40. Bang all tho uw--"rhas, two oommun .monts contain the substance of all the religious and moral dutim (unwind! In the law and the pm- pllets. which, therefore, may be all said to hang or depend on them." Love is the spirit of the whole law. It is tho more oxwllnnt way (1 Cor. xii. BI; xiii. 1-13); the fulfilling of the law (Rom. xiiiJO): the ond or the lnnv I nu... I - - "ore""" -uun In": principle in the heart from flows the 'golden rule' in I and the perfect, keeping of t'ommamimcrnw which refer duties to our fellow-mun." 38. l ms is mo 'icst---In I, antiquity, 2, dignlty; 3, oxwlleucc; 4, Jutrcice; .5, mlucloncy; li, ttusitrulnetsti; 7, vir. tue and Nina-my; ti. (mount; 9, ttttts eaaity; 10, '.iurutsioto.---smei And trreat--Thie lore is also the best, Um noblest. the most elevating. purify- ing. enlarging ttct of the tsoul.--)" hen. 'rhs is the greatest. commandant. 39. Tho 'xrconu---The first. table of the law defitws our duty to God; the second. our duty to our neighbor. In like-Ot a. like Immune, embrm-lng' tlu, whole ot our duw to man. 'Plor "own ,,V_ Kr" .v. -... all any Will --Nb, loves God with a.†his soul, or rather, with all his lite. who is ready to give up Me tor Hie Bake-to endure and surlur rather than to dishonor God." Soul is the ludindunl existence. the person himself. mm. or tn being made happy; b: love to God and man. Witt: all he.srv--'ptu, heart is the seat ol uIlt-ctlona, the desires, the mo and. the will. "It te the. centre c physiqu and spmitual life, the nu] loans from winch all the rag the mom! life go forth." All thy _"nu lnlvnn 13...: _».!‘I .. . . ,V,..... .v. uuvu ucl‘ui no ambiguous expressions. Love the Lord thy u'ou--rtto religion of the Bible does not consist in good exter- mal acts, in prayers, in our seal tur Christ, in performing the deeds of the lam, or tn being made happy; but, in love to God and nun. With all thy liei--Tise heart is the seat of the ufiections, the desires, the motives “nil run ...:n .--A r ' - -e-- -._. -.. nuwauslwl trap, our. uh: hMPi-sor prey wanted 111.ng it and “an. hum in it." Ltt, Wltieti--"ot wlun nature Is the gum: commandment in the law 2'" um.- greut 'eorumsuotimerit-Tiii. was a. disputed question among their doo- tom at the law. :37. Thou--chrust makes this a per- 80ou matter; He does not speak in a. general way, out He brings the truth home to Hus questioner. tshalt-- There Is no dance for cavu new: no .mh-I-u --- _ ,_.__._... w In; luv Rp"-- gle Him in HI. talk. First. came _the Htrroaians which“) and naked Him whether It were lawful ta give trp. buoe to Caesar. Matt. xxL 16-42. They came with honeyed words. Intenmng to disarm In: suspicious. and. by an appeal to His terarussarusa, have Him M -----.= ... - 9tynqtentarr. - Commuting Huh. Wine ' ....... 1?,e.tryfetrc?a.u _& . name temple Christ Slloneeu the Ph_.--Mttot,i.ak mmxnonu. mm: no. IV. JANUARY M, noon. SUNDAY SCHOOL 1.“ "tfuUM'tf our duty to God; tlie d, our duty to our neighbor. Is Ot a. like nature. embrm-ing' tlw , ot our dun to man. Thy neigh- as thytselt--'trix love is the inln a» um . - inaieiaiiid life, the cen- all we rays of I? tentre of all party Arr toentur soul It In the amends ot a short and troubled life that doing good and muttering ill entitles man to a longer and better-Penn. .....,.... vuuc.ngni If ninety-nine out of any huniirerl tet"1t,'.t1'ti/rij, it" intelligent people were asked In 'rl'/1".'l'if.': 3:31;“ what part of Scotland is the 'Lau-i do medium ' . of Burns" they wnuld probably name 1ht,hTfgj,iii,ryj,i, [Ayrshire An admirer of Hawthorne .llh1te'h',';',1fipds aloe said it was the Valley of a Him. -tFiiiirtrtfo'i/re'C'i, tired Fires. but he dim! any)" after.. £0040". lac-my wards. Few. even of Scutmnen. are (',.r'aliiiiiiiii'ilt,i4htr ' acquainted with its true locality. 8tocker%siiidiyior which is not Ayrshire. hut Kint-ur- l .ofr-iloru and hail dine. The port indeed made the for- (lite, IPI'.?. bull. per I CA"N,ttatett... I mer fnmlme by " songs. and wax (tmeep.expdrl b'WeF. ‘lmru there, but the hitter in his _tgeii,i,'i,ii'S2;i.'ir. . futherlnnd. the homo of lite poople. I'l2b. '.1a"illl'fr/"," the Site of hm ancestors heurtlm ; do per cwt _ __.. and graves ; all of them, from the (lives. per head ‘flrst recurdc-d dawn. . to Robbin‘u Itil?, "te1';g'TtT own father. were natives of the par- 1husliehi. per cm iah of Glenbervie that live “our the (t'lfiit.:l,,iiti,ai'i. '_.-, new. a few milrs south of Stonehuven. t8taarts . _.. "FJttuteh.vre," as its inhabitants call The it, is the country town. whither the Liabilities or f centre of local government was week of January transferred early in the seventeenth I which 8879.334 i century from the ancient but now against 214 in: extinct burgh of Kincardine, a few Canada. mmimn traces of which still remain near ------ Fetterealrn.-soottw American. an.-_. __ " Sny wm was Forged. l Inndon ttport "u.vtr--Tho jun “an just. â€turned a verdict in thr, Bitton will (use, and titvlr4 Monk†guilty at forgery. Two of his hruthr-rn. John J, and Alfred Slum). swans must positively that the signature “tun-kiwi to the will was not that of "otvuserd, and quite a number ot t-xpt-rt; in humi- writing gave it as thisir opinion that l by no mnnm-r of mmnx "ottld it lu- ‘ntntml that the sign-zlnrn on the notes and mortmet,' prulumwl worn- the sumo hand as p-nnwl tho wards “Joseph Hitton" on the uni-gm] will. which Edgar Mordvn m.†was ox.» outed by dccoused at his hum-w. and in the proh‘vm-t- of himrwII' and wire. It is Pun-(stud the addro- of runn- sel will be th" first oruiur of hu‘dlm-ss in the morning. A rumor was in circulation thus ulterumm that Edgar Mordim had nb~cundnd. hut Mtb Mngov. ur., Crown Attorrtoy, said thrro was no truth in the report. and that Mor- den would "pear for the Crown in the murder trial. t London Report 'iivs.--The inter. est in the Sift-mi will can» unntinuvs unabated. and the uttI-ndnnro in tho Crourtroom is (with na large as it “In (murder trial was in progrnsw. Tin. l majority are from tho suction im, mediately "ttrroundiurt thoi pluco where the Hilt'ms and Mordoms livv. nnd not a. row have Known them since they wore cltilrlren playing: to- gother. Tho widow-4- to-duy was plentiful, and the witnvsm-s without one exception, gave it me tlwlr opin- ion, after comparing thr, signature on the allowed will with that of Jo- seph H. Simon. on othor documents. including mortgagor». notes, und so forth. which had gum- thmugh their hands:, that the signature of the will was not tho lutn Jnurph H. Sifton‘n. more especially as he was never known to omit the capital "W' trom hi" signaturu. It ho lI-ft Tho L'OU i' row . Fh"uienee was 951‘?" :w to tho sign» tune to the will. An ttru'ottntant ot th" Bunk of Toronto HWOI‘J‘ that Siftonn general "ip,matauw was in lull "Joseph H. Siftnn,’ while that to the will was Joi. Slfmn. The taking ot tstitnony was then prxr.weded wrth, the ('li-rk uf the blur- mqato Court living tho first Git. ntMte. He depose" to tho m-vund will having been (-nt'rrwl Ivy Elgar Mar den for probate. Mr. minmuth Urn for un hour new! Morden'n evidenvo to thv Jsry ms Kiven by him in examination for discovers: V .~.- -----1‘ I VI‘JII All" that. from their minds while consid- ering tho evidence. On that uni-aunt and for other reasons he had derided to withdraw from the case. an , Would take the opportunity of arguing the ohjwtlons he had made qu-r on. oth Where is the hand of Burns? ttt um "hue. ha9stroso m. “we Lu.“- nmuonem tuuse, an anion lor tlaur aged nor belug run umr by u pom-L- puu'ol wagon. orcupml an Ion-noun and a portion ol the auusruuun at the “my: today. mm resumed in a war- diet (or we plaumtt and $l,l)00. " ter three hours th'htsaratioto. Immediately [allowing the above case calm: the Simon wnl suit, ubuut which more has been so much legal wranglmg In regard to pussport4uocnr. . .____ _----- -_l- . . _ THE DEFENCE LAWYER (NiTSl Accountant Testifies in Sifton WIII Case, I]lffiiillllilf IN MIN, baaod a perplexing problem which they could not solve. "It Dada then call him 10rd. how in he hit Hon t" Unlike his oppoaers. in putting this last question his object was not to ens-nus them but to show them a truth which they were unwilling to accept, viz., that the expected Mer,'. slab is God. Christ's oppose" confounded. the Matter now [women a question to the Pharisees, “What think ye of Cttrhtt Whom, Ion is He P' 'Do this they readily reminded. "The non ot David." On Ireir one unwel- he were wuen old and were ready to veal-h may. nor any particular mural precept; but the love of God and an neighbor. Love In the tiret and great thing God demand. trom us. and therefore the nret and great thing we should devote to him." All the commandments are summed up in two met ones. One embraces - duty we owe to men: and the other te?, duty We owe to God. Inndon report trugs-The mljmrnol until tumor while consid- that aeitoant 3 had derided Me. an i would ONTARIO ARCHIVES defence There are few pouple l more often in the wrung t who cannot endure to be 'rtr.--1tochetooeauid. ,irV...<~ -n'.nuulll. "cl URL Hulk. export. beuvr, per cw Bullk. ext-on. light. per cm. .t'.e-re.xtidr0"ih; 'r» .. . Feeders. hoary . __.... y3so4rrk.litrhL. _ .......... leading bullsâ€... -.re. Btoc#ei.itrstoiiititf,i ..._ . I .ofriorrvuftteiilsrC, -"_ I 'diit "oe* bull. per owl. it'ltfle,e,'g,tj,ceii2. Fr..-. 000.3an owes per cut 1Frd'iiiaT."."..'.'.r ".wr-..,.m. Alaskan travellers any the mull- toes there In: re driven men to stgtget. The Fullurn. Liabilities of luilums in the um week of January were $2,307,484. of which 8879.324 in the United sum. against 274 last. year. and ar In Canada. against 25 Inst your. F.i,t?uiGiaiiiiiGri.' oi/r. 'c'wt; !kl't to-tlux hml " tq'toltmry to drug. l and trade wm~' not. wry brisk. The ww-ipts were Mfg", but, the greatest Portion ot the studs was below tho tstandard of quality which. buyers claim. in lu-m:su.n.ry. Them were a. few has "r Cute muttlv. and runs-1pm Wept' lurgn, but, the balance were "omrraratively .low. [hovers were of the npiuhm that tho market was dull. whik- buyers thought it ut-tlw- mmgh. Humido- ing tho ttttttem of the offerings. Than was little 'i'trepotiitprn' to trade, hath buyers holding off untll later in the day, when ouch hoped to uncut-v tat"... ter bargains. Export mtucmholoc. 3:â€ch u in u, 3.; '0 Exam ouUeJighl. pen-wt" I 25 In I " Letttesttersi'ciiiii, par-had ._._. I " to I " 'f.utttyer1'i.iiiri,,Gii'ri; .._ . cm to t " Butr:uortsyidiiii.'iririii1Ct/ 350 I. C " ._1tetet"sditriC,i.T. '_.....- 25“ on 1- 101â€â€) ... ... . (it:'t),t,x1,',.i., red . button, whip, Duluth, No. 1 on: ... ... ... Duluth, No. 1 Minn-unions, numb-r" ... l-'.’v. m stor- t', hard. 661 PPD. Ct 1-20 Port Arthur tiuuvi \rry1 "HY I-L’r hh M "tttoba Wht, The nude In tlte I been unusual†small week. Tharp in very I ins: tron: the chantry. is also extrvmvly an rulml firm. Hulk-rs u [union to gm» WHY, J4'raerdny's hummus the In†of buyer» u No. 1 hard. Su-: No. : by. no “r me local business in con n-rm-d. of the m'uuull. Winnipm 'ommvrcl-zl. Jan. 12. Toronto Live '%toek Market-s. Business nt tho Wuhan: Cattle I.†" today mm a Ganutmtor to drag nd trade Wrtt4 not wry brisk. Th. t'hicago .. MW York M‘Iwnukr-p St. Louiu _ Following Hons at in); (In F'-- lit limit " ,1, '___ w . - u. no vac, and (hit-km are 'stoady " tta to 00v. Geese are run». but Hum in no cull for than. and they are nominal at T to tk. .. Ruled Hay-Th, raw-hm; um mode ate and th, nmrkvt in "utad.y., No. l is mum at $10 to $10.50 p1-r ton. and Na 2 at $9 to 89.GO quel- um. car lot: m truck lbw. Balm Buyw--orrerimm u-ry light, and demand gout. Qtrrtatioue range from " to $6 pm- ton for au- lot. on track trare. Toronto Funnel-3’ Margot. Jan. IT.-The total dulivoricu nl Inu- Manly he x-l -'e .-._V v .'iN.r.rt',. " "I “I. I'lll‘lh 20 to 210, WUIMV held " to 18c. plckled 15 to 16e, "ttvuhe 12 to lie., and mm.- Be. "natoor-afari-A ("fps and price. unzhmgml at 33 to 3k- per hug for car lots on track tgee. Potatoes out of More um Worth 450. 1'oe.ut-prrerntki, um light, and thuv in little or no donrmd. Tttrko.m are easier, selling in. a t-2 w 10 L20. and (Ml-km lust s-tuvtatw no "t ., an» pl Etart-aueee is a moderate move ment. but. trade in tslow, Net. mm are name and in In“: dammd no 28 to 8th. tor (moo Iota. 8 luck-J h Id an mm]: 20 to 21r. (annual-y held " on 19.. -4__ch_= -- -- at â€I‘m-onto Pun-ace Market. Butter-tgait h quiet on mount ot the Ihrttt demand. Offering-o an not heavy, but they arr sunk-lent tortt> demand. Prim» luv steady and Ill- ch mead at " to Lor. (on dairy pound rule. 18 to :0: tor tttego rolls, " to ITC, tor low-crude mu... and no to th tor who. Th'w is a gun deal " creamy on tho market And trade h that Pr, to Carr. Prints an- steady no I). .A. an:- - _ eggs uriy. 'oul t rl, -Trttet, 7tk ly at. IO viioieost " on “3.1 67 l-L'( "' E-d."', Art. I; III. torn Fort Willirm 661-2": drimt Nu -'de in more King' :hur. The local m prit'e. ti an] chic! Om ing urn the closing Important whrat urn tttr people who ding V. ttt (r. The local market GG, qulet today, but noth lghvr. in K‘lnlh‘lthl mm 1 north- 'rings HI nu uvtts: 23c, and ikiiiiin Ere Tir/ii, per ch mm than use; I r ttere, a"" ttttt man. Primal have showing no (Im- v, At the Home of , "mutations on were nu fullowrv L' hard, 700 ; Nu. r. 3 northern. (M Villirm; dried No. ind No. 3 north- Kimz'u ah-vutor. n7 n7 (has - - 073 " u " twt " 793.4 fl 73; 3.4 0 Mtl Toe $0 70 llllll. mu! ver., M. Turkey" an- lv. bu". it is only which brim; the 0 78 3-1 " n MN' thought ttrl eta. but there in Prion-I an deliveries at " to drug, It. The It the "h was "I: quot"- =vnlrvu to- W at Te 'r at 40c tur " 1-2 0 80 1-8 " 74 7.~ tyThtt M,ay IIC if};