West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Apr 1901, p. 7

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tr else it may Be- ion fur stomach and may be enoughto whole body going it helps you mom Fttt TOLS MATTERS wear 4: BOW N E. C from!“ Sonic” estion I () NO I4 1901. M Toronto. LOO '. al, drum... AG MFO d the "Hula of bond- n w DROPSY ONE r d a r Men-ugh. stion 353951}, 3E ttle without the stomach. a»; a' whaling}: and g black It!“ [mm-m. laid: I shut [HM m-tto-r and»). W tact that I form with‘ 4.1me at tho "trtN Intel, WIRES Blglit Sent on Trial men In EMT. a story In very 'anart " noon"). " the-atria! tt, one oe l-uttonw on If went ”3'. Jo-cllnnu bio " a In". n-ur In tho deep lb. “NE or "I Peninsula, " on on (no r... l h in m tryut. '1 one par " " N " ml! 9.5 needs a may be it from of Cod ”on“: I“ boom.- cl'm‘uiulol q In ti..-. u was OI. "own trot- nnu alreertg a Grgtrttht Int-f tact nu i, A nous; aro, Ll” In shank! d. "g humb- ~ “wit “a". (PAL 'rvonw mr. martted road ' Milan: alarm um:- M9. MEG.“ " "stiorC yt wage Pull" IN mayo k . ad}; If I An “’0 I fundoi [Horu- nd It. .k an. 3310!:le ye tbt "o" unthJ. canny (all. Pt '3 ml f "I. ti 'lh!‘ d "a 'AM, “it "I. Hg A Washington report an. " u now - and from a peculiar tut Dr. Toi- a.“ discourses of good ttttttteg- brought to bear for the world's imo ,rovement. The text is Ezekiel ix. & "And one man among them wu cloth: ed with linen, with a writer's inhhorn n his side." " Furthermore. the IDKSIulIu v. -..- business man has Its mission. Be- tween now and the hour at your de- mise. o commercial man. o profes- slonal man, there will not be a (it! when you cannot dip from the lnkhorn I message that will 1nttuenee temporal and eternal destiny. There lg a rash young man running into wild speeula- tion, and with as much ml: in you can put on the pen at one time you may save him from the Nigel-3 rapids ot a ruined life. On the next street than: u a mum: man started in bus!- um... .r.._.. - tion. and with as much ink a. you can put on the pen at one time you may save him trom the Nisan; rapids ot a ruined life. On the next street there is a young man started in busi- ness, who. through lack of patronage or mistake in purchase ot good! or want ot adaptation. is on the brink of voiiapse. One line ot ink from your Den will save him from being an un- demng all his lite. and start him on a Pareer that win win him a fortune whch wilt enable him to become an ondnwer of libraries. an opener of at raileries and builder ot churches. . *A- n.- -.._. patleries and Du Furthermore. mum: of the the people. or tend. nnd that lErllng an In: ...s. ___-- "areer that will win him a fortune th-h will enable him to become an "Mower ot libraries. an opener of art falleries and builder of churches. Furthermore. great are the respond- bmties of the author's inkhorn. All the people. or nearly ull the mph. Mod. and that which they read de- em their morals or minors". their .-... B"""""'"" _ I, for eternal purposes, I speak mission ot "the writer's Ink- 2d glass blowers an lg more ornate and the Ink, but not one so sacred as the old- ml out ot which was a for the making of d on the blank leaves the inkstand ot the tas Its mission. Be- the hour ot your de- rcial man. o profes- ma will not be a. any he prosperity or hiiure. their faith or their unbelief, their purity or corrup- lion, their henven or hell. Show me any man's library. great or small, and after examining the books, ttndlng those with leaves uncut, but displayed for sake of the binding, and those worn with frequent perusal. and without ever seeing the man or knowing his name, I will tell you his likes and his dislikes; his morals, good or bad or in- different; his quauftctitlorts tor business or artistic or professional or mechan- ical life. The best index to any man‘s character is the book he prefers above ‘all others. Oh, the power of a. book I for good or evil'. Abraham Lincoln in early life readl Paine's Age of Reason, and it so in- tlueneed him that he wrote an essay! against Christianity, but afterward. some Christian books came Into his hands and gloriously changed his mind and made him a. most ardent friend ot the Bible and a. man ot prayer. - While passing, an in parenthesis, I/ advise: Read books n“ 'netry. that the bells in your soul may be set a-' chiming. Read history, that you may know how wrongdoing in time comes to defeat and righteousness to victory. Read books of law, that you may see that anarchy has no right in a world so precisely governed. Read books of wit and humor, that you may experi- ence the liealthfulness ot laughter. Read books of religion. that you may appreciate how small is the vestibule 'lot time compared with the palaces ot 1 eternity. .. Through books we sit down and talk with the mightiest spirits of Bil the ages. We accompany Tennyson on his springtime walk as he falls upon his knees in the meadows. crying to his companion: "Violets, man. violets'. Smell them." Or we ride with Trajan in his triumphal march. or stand with Godfrey at the taking of Jerusalem, or with arctic explorer hear the crash ot the icebergs, or are received with Her- nando Cortes m the halls or Montezu- ma. or watch in the observatory as liierschcl with his telescope captures l another star. or the ink in the inkhorn turns red as blood. and we are at Marengo and Arbela and Kyhsu and Borodino and Leipoic; or we sail with .Hamilcar from Carthage to Palermo. _ - - "I., -.u..- Ilalllll\ III In __... M-__'.- V, or we see Galileo fighting tor the solar tl system. and around us gather tor con- I A versation Aristotle and Plato and Rob- 0 ert South and Sydney Smith and l Chaucer and Paul Richter and Swift , and Hazlitt and Leigh Hunt and Tal- l leyrand and Burke and Edward Irv- I ing, while to make music for us Han- 1 del and Mozart and Mendelssohn come I in, and we watch Columbus landing. ( and see John Harvard's legacy of 2900 l paid over for the founding of Harvard university, and Joshua Reynolds and tavid Wilkie and Rembrandt tell us i ot their pictures. Oh, the books.' Thank God for the books. and thanks be to all the authors! May the inkhorn ever be under divine inspiration'. When a bad book is printed you do well to blame the publisher. but most of all blame the author. The malaria. rose from his inkstand The poison that caused the morav or spiritual death dropped in the maid from the tip of his pen. The manufacturer of that ink could tell you that it is made ot tannin and salt ot iron and nutgalls and green vitriol, but many an author has dipped from his inkstand hyper- criticisfi and malevolence and slander i and tsalaciousne" as trom a fountain I of death. But blessed be God for the I author's inkstand in 10,000 studies y Which are dedicated to pure intelli- " genes. highest inspiration and grand- , est purpose. They are the lnkstands I out of which will be dipped the re- t demption of the world. The destroying l angels with their swords seen in Eze- n kiel's vision will he finally overcome oi hv the merciful angel with the writer's out of which will demption of the Wt angels with their I Mel’s vision will by the merciful an tnkhorn. Among the most lmpOTlallL out: ""1 editorial and reportorial inkstands. The thick ink on the printer's roller is different from the ink Into which the writer' dips his pen and is compounded of linseed oil and lampblack and made thick by boiling or burning. But the' editorial and reportarial pens are re- sponsible for that which the printer's ink roller impresses upon the ttying sheets. Where one man reads a hook, 5,000 men read a. newspaper. What ‘change of opinion in regard to the l printing press since the day when the great Addison wrote concerning it: I "One cannot but be sorry that such a. pernicious machine is erected among them," and when, under the reign of Charles TT. only one newspaper. the 'London Gazette. was allowed to be printed. and that only on Mondays and Thursdays! Not until the judgment day. when the forces which have in- ttueneed the world shall be compared -% ...ul he known the 'Be"""""'" and announced, power ot the mo ”um and "o""""'""' power of the modern newspaper. l A wrong theory is abroad that thei newspaper impression ls ephemeral. Because we read and cast it aside in an hour and never see It again we are not to judge that we are parted from its influence. No volume of GOO pages makes such impression upon the people as the daily news- paper. It is not what we put away carefully upon the shelf and once in awhile refer to that has as close re- lation to our welfare as the story of what the world Is now doing or has recently done. Yesterday has more to do with to-day than something recurring a century previous. The en- gineers who now guide the rail trains. ",t-- who now command recently done. “mun..." ___ to do with to-day than Gmethintrl, occurring a century previous. The en- gineers who now guide the rail trains the sea captains who now command the ships. the architects who now de- sign the buildings, the batons that now control the orchestra, the legislators who now make the laws, the generals who now march the hosts, the rulers who now govern the nations, the ink- horns that now ttood the world with mtenisrerwe---these are what we have most to do with. i You have an seen what is called indelible ink. which is a weak solu- tion of silver nitrate. and that ink you cannot rub out or wash out. Put it there, and it stays. Well. the liquid of the editorial and reportorial inkstnnds in an indelible ink. It put! upon the souls of the passing genera.- tione characters of light or dar1rnees that time cannot wuh out and eter- nity mnot "ace. Forever indelible. Be were! how you use it. The im- Wneo, ulI\o\.. "V, - only one newspaper, the zette. was allowed to Be l that only on Mondays and Not until the judgment the forces which have in- , world shall be compared med. will be known the most important are the - _ ‘r_.l_ a passing genera- light or darkness um out and eter- Forever lndelible. use it. The im- mat la called a weak solu- and that ink or wash out. *E'm Dreulon made with n will be ruplend- ent or repulsive on the day for which all other days were made. -.. - All Christendom has been waiting for great revivals ot religion to start from the pulpits and prayer meetings. l I now suggest that the greatest revival ot all time may start a concerted and organised movement through the ink- horns of all Christendom, each writer dipping from the inkhorn nearest him a letter ot gospel invitation, gospel hope, gospel warning, gospel instruc- tion. The ink is already on a hundred lthousaud tables. and beside it are the implements with which to dip it out. Why not, through such pr0cess, have millions of souls brought to God be- tore next summer? By letter you could make the invitation more effective than by word of mouth. The Invitation from ‘your lips may be argued back, may evoke querulous reply, may be answer- l ed by a joke, but a good, warm gospel letter, written in prayer and started lWlth prayer and followed by prayer, 'will be read over and over again and cannot he answered in a frivolous way. It wilt speak from the table by day and night. or, it pettishly torn up, will, ‘in its scattered fragments, speak loud- 'drf than when it remained whole. With- ln arm's reach of where you sit there may be a fitnd that you may put on‘ _ wing with message of light and love. Oh, for the swift flying angel of mercy , which Ezekiel saw In vision "with a , Writer's lnkhorn by his side!" I The other angels spoken of In my r text were destroying angels. and , each had what the Bible calls a " slaughter weapon " in his hand. It ', was a lance or a battleaxe or a - sword. God hasten the time when , the last lance shall be shivered and t the last battleaxe dulled and the last - sword sheathed, never again to leave l the scabbard. and the angel of the ' text, who, Matthew Henry says,‘was he)“, "no, AFA-wh..'--'" ---"-. - _ the Lord Jesus Christ, shall. from (“ng the full lnkhorn of his mercy, give a 3. T saving call to all nations. That day [one a may be far oft, but it is helpful to of the think of Its coming. As Dr. Ra- xx 1) lelzh declared, that when M) miles at the b see. oft the coast ot New England the were cattle on board the ship. as well as hold I himself, scented the clover on the the t New England hills. so we amid all dispel the tossing waves of the world's con. 4, l troversles, inhale the redolence of i know the white lilies ot universal peace. Is ' The-lr it not time that the boasted lnven; l 'i,'l av .._-e-., A... w mr. " run "In: um... u... __e_"-"'" - tion of new and more explosive and l more widely devastating weapons of - "eath be stopped forever and the trms- I pel have a chance and the question 1 he not asked. How many shots can 1 be fired in a minute '? but How many 1 "\uls may be ransomed In a "ey'. The world needs less powder anv more grace. fewer fortresses and more churches. less power to destroy and more power to save. Oh, I am sick of ti .var cries and the extinguished eyesight and the splintered bones ano lthe grave trenches and the widow- lhood and orphanage and childless- ness which sob and groan and die in the wake ot the armies on both sides of the seat Oh, for less of the slaughter weapon and more of the iii,'tiiii'iiiit? inkhorn! Oh, for the stopping of the science of assassina- tion, that crime of crimes, that woe ot woes, that horror ot horrors. that hell of hella-war. which this moment stands reeklng with blood and wash- ing itself in tears and (,t,',1h'Jti'l'i/ the heavens and pushing oft the edge of this life men who have as much right to live as you and I have and blasting homes in which there dwells as much loveliness as in our own! Would that the merciful angel of my text take the last weapon of war and ', fling " off and fling it down with V such force that it shall clung on the '. lowest round ot the Perdition where ' the first keen edge of human strife , was sharpened '. War! In the name . of Almighty God and of all the home- , steads it has Jestr ' --l and is now t destroying. l hut.- I denounce it. e I curse it! - --N -A nohnr as much loveliness Would that the mew text take the last v fling " oft and ft:' l curme u. . If our Bible is trot--and no other book that was ever printed is as true as that book. which Moses be- Kan and John tintshed--then the time will come when all the weapons of cruelty will stop and the inkhorns of evangelisatlon will have their way. The red horse of carnage that St. John saw in a vision, and the black horse of famine, and the pale horse of death will be stabled, and the white horse of prosperity and peace. mounted by tho King of Kings, will ilead the great army with banners. Through the convicting. converting,; sanctifying power of the Eternal Spirit, may we all march In that procession! Htul, thou Mighty Rid- er of the white hcrse in the final triumph! Sweep down and sweep by, thou angel of the New Covenant, with the inkhorn of the world's ovarurelisation'. "The mountains and the hills shall break forth into sing- Ing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands. Instead ot the thorn shall come up the fte tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle tree and it shall be to l the Lord for a name, for an everlast- R--, -t--, nun aha" not Be cut ott." ing Sign At Bristol Assizes. Daniel Aup'u'n l an unctuous professing (Yliristimn‘l who had taken a prominent part in . , local ovarwicli.vtic' work, was sen- , tenced to Ir, yours' penal servitude for attempting to murder one of his children by the atrocious process of gradual starvation. The prisoner had lived with a Woman named Chappell. who was found guilty on the same charge. but escaped with tho lighter punishment of five years. and the evidence showed that while tho offspring of their illicit union had been well fed and cared tor, the two little boys who were Allport‘s legitimate children by his wife had been the subject of systematic and diabolical cruelty on the part of both criminals. Deprivation of food and constant exposure to cold had reduced the strength of the two poor children to such a low ebb that tho preservation of their lives was almost a miracle, and Allport had a narrow and undmervcd cs- ttti of being hanged for murder. M t fathers and mothers who rc- tuin the natural instinct of parents will regret that it was not legal to hang the moxmdrcl. or to doom him to a more lingering form of death. The systh that permits the insuring of children's lives is alto. gether at fault. Child insurance as it is practised puts a premium on tho death of children, and tempts parents to forget the primitive in- stinct of parental Gve.-wesrtom Engu Mercury. I... I George t Bliss. the well known [ New York retired banker. in dead, ' an the result of complication! devel. ' oped from the grip. " u.» tiiiit Imam not be Bruml Crime. Dania! Allirort, ine Christian. was when the From (unravel-(x ve a 3. They day Lem seem n to of the re Ra- xx 1); th :3 at the body I the were Pt SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSOR APRIL T. 1901. Cornutentarr-1t was of the utmost importance. though they knew it not at the tum. tint we {not ot Lhriot's death should be proved beyond the possmlhty of easil or doubt, tor other-Wise distrust would be lhronn upon the tact of 11.9 reconnection. laud-y precaution was taken, not by 11.8 oucipIee. Bat by the ("thrilled of Jesus. The women who had remained near the cross uw where the bony was laid. and wont home to prepare spices and ointments for the com- pietion ot the unbulming and then rested ox er the Siubath. 1. The first day ot the week-Christ was in the tome part of Friday, all ‘ilay Saturday and part of Sunday, which was called three days aceord- ing to Jewish reckoning. Ila arose very earl, in the morning on the met day or the week. At the appearance of tho angel the Ronni: guards were an trialltunud Hint thev tell as dead at) iriirriGViiurt" illeyvtell as dead men, and " woa.d seem that they tl, d from the tomb ttentre the Women IIUlu ill‘.‘ -9...w.. ~_-v._ __ came. Very early in the morning-- They came at the earliest momtnt ut- ter their Sabbuth. John says. "When It was yet stark," cometh Mary. Mark ‘ says. "They came unto the sopnlchre at the rising of the sam" Bringing the trpueeei-Powpered, aromatic sub- stances and fluid perfumes appear to have heen used in laying out the dead body for burial. 2. The stoma rolled tsway-ht' the women journeyed they questioned who should roll away the stone. but when they reached the tomb they discovered the stone was rolled away. - -- _ I.” w-.'.. WBWICIW tun, "Wu“ te-ee" - 3. They entered Ut-Mary Magda- l hem seems to have been in advance of the rest and only looked in (John l xx 1); the others entered. Found not the bodr-th" llnen grave clothes were there, but the tomb could not hold Christ. The empty grave was the boundary line between the old dispenHatiort and the new. 4. Much pcrprexed-Thy did not know what to do or when) to Co. Their thought was "They have tak. en away the Lord, and we know not where they have laid Him." Two men --Angelm Matt. xxviil. '.5..9rattlusw speaks of but one. the one who did] the speaking, and Mark speaks of him as a young man. Shining gar- avuittr--Mattls lw is lys [Hal countsnuncv was like lightning and his raiment whitt1 as snow. "The rnlnwnt was (um- biematieal of tho glad tidings which . ---v W, .....| um Av.-. .... -r _ 571‘]on were atrairr--It is no Won» der that the worn-n wet-n afraid. Mat. thew says that through tear the keepers "did shake and become as dead mom." Thier-The, angels, said-- "Why seek ya the living among the dead t" - -- _---- A...".:f'um| Lu! new: r 6. He is rierr---Ho, was cruvifiml, but is risen. Instead of anointing him as dead they may rejoice in his being alive from the dead. “Death hath no more dominion over him." The result Notion morn was a Ilmo ot glad. nose to the disoipies of Jenna. T. Ba.rint-Bee chap. ix. 22, 44, 45; xviii., 31-33 l Matt. xvi. 21. Rise again ~Jesuq had tried to impress them with this truth in order to comfort them in the hour of their great sor- I row, but they tailed to comprehend its meaning. l 9. Returned from the sepulchrP- Matthew says the angel told them to go quickly and tell his diriciplrs that He was risen. and that they departed quickly with fear and great Joy, and did run to bring the dir;- ciples word. 10. Mary Mnzanoetw-"she was a. native of Magdaln. a town on the Sea of Galileo. and was foremmt among the tumorahlo women who ministered unto Christ and His dim (times. being especially devoted to Chriat tot. His mercy in Pasting out .. -t....tge, Ila-Iv tho, The Rttsurreetion of J ttsus-Luke 9. Returnmt from Matthew says the I to go quickly and l that m, was risen, dpparted quickly wit Joy, and did run tr ciples word. __ -- H IRA-4-]. nature on in:u;.u....-, ___ - Sets of Galilee, and was foremost among the himorablo women who ministered unto Christ and His dig-. ciples. being emm-ially devoted to Chriat tor His mercy in rusting out from her seven, evil spirits. Mary, the mother of Jarnos--Callvd James the Less to uyrtirtquitth him from Jamvs the brother of John. She was the wife of Mpheum, who seems also to have been called Cleophma. 11. Believed them not - They thought they must surely htt mistak- mt; they would not understand or comprehend their words. - _- n..on._,lnhn went WW... _'..- .. "V 12. 'Phert amuse Peter with him and row-had t first. thn xx. 2, 3. TIhr the story from Mary M: fore the women returns orthes--This was the which Joseph of Arimatl the body. ies lily. u: nu, u--.r - r - The doctrine of a. general recurrec- l her. 'e' tion is hasn't! on the resurrection of 1 never Christ. St. Paul affirmed his belief l that. in the reerurrection of the dead in un- ‘ trerte4 mistnknblo terms. But he adds, "rr'; Am Christ be not risen, then is our tttry] , preaching vain. and your faith Is also '; 1B82, vain." ! in to, - _ - - n__ .-r-s-..iB, ', tor tt On tho doctrine of the rrlmrrec- tion i! founded the Cluristian's hope of immortality and eternal lite. It proves that "death does not end all," but that the 9m] lives after the body is dead. AR Christ rose triumphant over death and the grave, even so tho bodies of those who die in Christ shall tr, changed and “fashioned like unto Hie glorious body, according to the working whereby he in able even to Iubdue all things unto himself." Christ. the risen vaiour, lives to intercede tor fallen man. He died tor our sins and rose tor our Jtrstitieation. Through Hun we approach the altar "o turn nx-v._ V in muse Peter-John wont and rmuthed tho svpnlchre n xx. 2, 3. They had heard P from Mary Mnminlono. tre- women returned. The linen Tmis was the fine linen m spun of Arimatlura, wrapped trine of the rcmrrec-l od the Christian's hope by and eternal lite. It l, 'death does not end all," and lives after the body l Christ rose triumphant 1nd the grave, even not those who dle in Christ l Iged and “fashioned like T rlous body, (weanling to i 3121-12 ot mercy: on Him we plum our atree- tions; in Him we trust as our present dellverer and "(w-present help-w; through Him we ndvnnm to over in- creaalng [Lights of msral excellence: and In His name we expect to triumph over the Inst enemy and rocnive our spin-Ital body that can never dia. 1 “m““nl‘ " Thin lesson trachea the possibility) Following are and necesslty of the mom! resurrec- g Hons at iutpor tion. Those who urn dud In sia may T brea to-day: be made allve In Christ. Bat du-nth ' must precede remwrretiot ';Chietugo...... ...... All men will rise again-im" toE‘New York... ... "glory and lmnur": "others to shame i, Milwaukee... .r. ... and everlnatlng contempt." The cc-r- , st. Louis... ... ... talnty ot the resurrection. of the day l 'iiida.-..... ...... .. lot Judgment, and the rntrlbou-ma of l Detroit, red... ... 'etornlty, should Ivan all to nuke it i Itctroit, white ... their great obrct tn "learn and do I Duluth. No. the will of God: twarkran daily to His I Northern .. . . ._ voie, trli vine, heartily His dvvrura. '; Duluth No. |tlons. and drying, vh w'tnllv 'ml per GG.'.. ... .._ .r. sewrim‘lv Hi4 commune .. Each. and Mummumlis. No, lsuoh only, shall ‘1'. we a rvtsurretutrm . b'ortherrr., qe' ‘Prominent Englishmen Seek I Control of Public Houses. Z; iivTri'iitrmr glory T0 LESSEN DRINK SALES A London cable says: b Municipal sn- l loom'," conducted to dimouruge the I sale of intoxicating drink. are about 5 to be catnmlahed throughout the i United Kingdom. "The Public Emu f arasrt Company. Limited,' under the l direction ol hurl (may, Lords Luten- ant of the county of fd,rthutuberlarrl, I purpose: to lea-e or purchase the ex- lstmg wJoons. “ammo all the new 1 licenses. and Innings: the propevths so obtained for the bouent of the local communltlea. The compJu t‘xppctn to roturn the l per cent. mterest on its capltnl and to uexote, tttr nun“): Etttrnme'id to the I tsorurtruetiort and malntenunxc of l churches. schools. parks, theatres, librartetr, hoepltms on I mule. In an Interview to-day Lord Grey and: l "No modern temperance advocate wlll.ng to take " practlcnl view or the lnmor problem any longer bellows l in prohlbltlon. It has proved " failure in the United States as well no m Grmtt Brawn. l.9,ruh:tlon is the only weapon with which we horn in Eng- Land. at least, can successfully light the trade mtrenchod betnud £-().(.()J.- ooo ($100.01 0,000) of nnmml not pro- tite. - f .. A IA»- an else, “on. Mlllth1 (illjlilllli, “I 5|! " ”J <-\v V Among Earl GreyU nummmtvs in “he new project are the Duke ot Nor- tahu,mbortamf, Viscount Kidney. torn» erly Home Secretary; Sir Edward Grey. M.. P., and minors. Lady Henry Somerset, President ot tlho Women’s Christian Temperance Union, asked ttor opinion on the scheme, win-0d to-night: _ __ ' _ LA - unfit. suntan-n, " ..._- _. n.1,," “I know Lord Grey to be a most enthusiastic and devoted philanthro- pist; but if his methods WON“ to sur- ceed he ought to have begun them two hunk-Pd yours ago. It is impnm sibie now tor art or beauty to (mango the lmrnditnry tcndmmies acquired by the Anglo-Saxon mew. Alcohol has too long possosaui the rare'tt brain tor thorn to kill those tendencies in any other way than by the, total abstin- ence of new-ml gmwrntions." (il1llflihl U? l MW lnon A Pit, a Post, Handcuffs and a Skeleton, _ VENGEANCE OF ANGRY HUSBAND .7, ...V.. ,7 _ .wenty inches thick surround- In tltsy cenu'e of we pit. was solid iron post, “um-um to Wis n bony iron chain and an ahinncd mir of hundrufhi t ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO hendmg Wttrttt Markets. Following are we closing quota- uons at Important wheat cen- Oicatto.-... ...... m., New York... ... ... Milwaukee... ... ... St Louis... ... .....r Detroit, red... ... Detroit. white ... . Duluth. No. I', Northern .. . . ... Mun-run Grain and Produce. Montreal. March 28.-Fluur quota Hons: Patent winter, 55ou ta $4 patent sprung. $1.10 to 84.30 naught ro.le.'. $3.3J to 33.50. thuru none . aunt-{In ', “one ', strung New _ fl ' r ., _-__ .2: an ., $3.80 to tt, Ontario bugs. .14” as $1.80. Wtutat--.No. 2 Manitoba hard. 88 to 900. Corn. " to GOe.. peas. " to T3c.; oats, G2 to Me.; barley. GO to tne.. rye, " to 58s.. buckwlwat. " to 560. outlaw”. $1.60 to $1.70 ; corn- m at t,0uto " Pork. $19.00 to $2050; lard. T to R2. bacon, IL'. to IGe.; hams. 12 to lie. I l IIT. l New. 9 to 10-; rar4ter, townships. 20 to 22c., wesu'rn 15 to IOC.; cup. 12 to 140. Ion-mum 'turttterti' “nu-kn. wtseot-Deliveri 's, l 10) bush: ls; prices “may to lirm, God bushcla' od white sold I-'..'.". Iligzll‘l' at 0391-20., and BOO of goose at 67c. Red wan . I, _ ..n .." On " 1 20. Oats~Slemiyz 100 bus 34 130.. May and Slrnw-Twel hay Fold roe. to $1 and $15.50 a ton. '1mroe lo; tsold at $9.50 to $10 a. t " I'd-Aim liny and straw-Twenty loads at has Fold roe. to $1 east-r at 614 to $15.50 a ton. Three lands of straw sold at $9.50 to $10 a. ton. Seeds. Tho feature of the market hon-la the etrrngth ot rod clover, the de- mund tor which is archives Stock! are small. Wc (New for in. lot- here: Haiku. $6.70 w 558.50 per bushel; red clmcr, 567’. bt $7.801!” bushel; mummy, $2.40 to $3.35 per bushel Manitoba “heat. Mann-us. There is [truth-ally no change in the local market aincv " wool: ago. At the beginning of tue week, with the advause in the outiuie markets, there aroke a strungvr nus'.ing., and Irrieey were nominulq rd" higher without causing nny 'uwrotlro in the amount of business. This has been lost rim-0. Hui lore-t nro lirm. but there is no dmunnd and buyers are scarce. There in increasing mutlon as re- garded tough wheat. Prices' M the close yesterday wore vxactly the surm- all " week ago . No, 1 hard. Fk'; No. 2 hard, 79.12 No. 3 hard. 0%; No. " northern, Gill-BC; tough No. 3 hard. 6-50; mum No. .", nurtlu-ru. 59c; all in More Fort William, spot or en route, ho. 1 hard clot-ml nt 840 and ‘3“). " at, 630 in more Fort William. luminous is very dull and inactive. ‘The country wheat market in dull. The top price quoted to (archers le iB5c per bushel tor hunt grades I ‘whvat, and trom that price! range ixluwu to 500. manor-ling: to quality I of grain and rate of ”right. -Wintti- l per commercial. . nut 'iutulo Marla-l. Show; and Lututui--orrerrte, 6O loads: active dunmml; tshoitus to ex- , tra lamb. $3.90 to 86; “on” to . clinic", $5.75 to 85.90; vmumnn. to fait, $5.25 to 3.1.30. Him-Pp, choice to F extra, $7: to $5.215; [and to "ite, 84.75 to 8rr, (1lein 85 to $5.35. "rorscphsrrrtlT /raht. It loath; ; pried (Mr. $5.25 to 3.1.7.0. Hm extra, $5 to $5.25: k" 34.75 to .5; cL'irIoi 8 Hogs-sumo .rpm 1. H Ge to loc anghur. tun-4h mam}. “va $627. to (WK, $6.10 to 86.15; [I £5.92 stag During “If huh-s wrrv a 6:3 were (ultuluguc bought 62.000 Dulu- ‘J4.000, Amvrmn 4 “(T0 e,orriod mvr. day’s sales: -- A . Ilv _ I., ‘HKOE'WS‘INUI Wall-s. Summit]. 4 Ic.'." 10 In iii-Ltd to MM. Qua-minim. 23,000 tcrle 8! to In GU; granny. (M t; Victoria, 1.800 hules .. Trut to In 7d; groan-y. South J Manned. 1 4d to 8d In 1 l-2d Business at , tair this WM"; Iiti might P' 0 Vifrade at Winning lined by_nnld wruth appeurl' to o" son will Hhmv over last ymr. The wIIon-snlv uport alum: _." l on the variout4 a steady "km n general outlook summer trado I Thorn In"! I] Thorn lulu movement ir London. Val trqcAU.. '"GGrness at (In in looking up.“ ui 100$ng up. At Ottawa thero has been oomrider- able mowmvnt in l'ghtur gum“. and many orders for hvmy lime Car culp- ment later are being bmked by the wholesale trade. -. ., .-- “-- ”I..- WIILVICBIIIV: nun-u... At (metro the outlook tor the nprlng trade. received tram rvliulie mm. in encouraging. I _ EH “10 to rough; 84.3.3 k, $4.10 to $4.30; . $3.3J to 33.50. thura, ', “one; strung mem', outario bugs. $1.50 to .undun Wool Nates Australia, 9 It.'" to In ' (-lele ‘5 ply JAIN. H lt w.guer, amivr y, $0.25 to . m $6.15; Pitt its. p.40 to ' l to 84.75. I Cash pm. Mc-Hnlo “mm at Hamilton Ma "f busy wwk. 'l‘ruv: Her. Lrinus routm un- reporting 'ttttt as? in luminous. and the utlook for the spring and rude ls very encouraging. an Iron quite an ucuve in the jabbing trade " Values are firm tor staple " hem MarkMr , around n :Lilnhlt 0 " 0 79 079 O T3 1-3 ttTI 0763-8 -- if. that th '. WHII‘I‘ active do- 23 to 80.30: York- .15; plan. 85.90 tat All to 8.3.70; “lugs. $4.73. t',lottod firm. ( 2-8 0 " 3-8 In bi sold at 'y, oi to 9 l-‘Jd. hales - Scour M. grower. . "2d to oo tps-Grin "St hm: bwn sumt ttlror. Th" feeling A tho coming so.- Im'gv improv, [aunt Mar. 80 TO 0 so 34! n tor (-nmplninl trttriv I) “do” t Tan-unto. There reut on thm part huwr-w-r. to get hands " I'lbbl'l'l “MPH wanted and inns-y is In good 0 131-8 0 TS 1-2 0 50 1-2 11‘1“.- Coast clun- 0 TI 1-4 100 halos - Hid; KNEW}. 'les-Sorrel oo bn In 11H.“ {1'0" i,, " " Ell

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