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Durham Review (1897), 11 Apr 1901, p. 7

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Moldova on the 'mtt.taelt. pr bNcqoey in tho Company‘s hm. hm r‘ for vultures "In“. I p out: during the you -oagtt" h p ttrst year's out premium-0M Nu rear, and "mouse for a henna " 01.041.35.01" the "but umtlsm. The renal-tau. ngth and mans-Noun 3003M“ petty of Nvrviline---t- pub F-renders it “most inlullible h nm'ltlsm. Hm mne- stronful In any othrr. its pcnetratl‘ " ettabloq it to reach “no loam ruin and drivo out the 61-3... Vilma In more tre/gs,': mgv‘r. and m." hlglly polo-Oil’- Ig In its netion than any with noloro army-d for the renal oi " infirmitiw. Onassis“ “I I "where. POETRY TO ORDER, Hidden Ind R IND! no mun t " , nd ife Company. A lid mg and ar window ep . very “on “W Servant-e (are: w and drink ed your ‘uy to Ir-IH w. you oat the door. _ got. your money) m t punk-d on the oqt. mr hum window duril‘ tr. l:ln.!lux'-I Ill-Kt motl- pu< and otrrred $30 no- . Lomp'runce poet, I“ nun-y d the poetio . ry Ir'xt night the 'etgt. , as is supposed. tried " and this was what in ”1wa to the “no “I. Want W hut A-trut, cheap we can to "ink. on the until-twill I. t "mt Wu lot M an o'm-llc-nt add!“ “can 1%pr“ ml I" yuan ago: us having ent- "tcil to Nam ll- . given to u no.0] [ landlord WI. no .vuntvd unmet“. w Hm good no" 31.33501. surplus OI 32,279.21 {.ml quit? full). ' 1.9mm 0- 36413 02 KIN M of mu‘ "" 31.76.an In $794,624 " $794,626 " 5,279,268 M gm“ Direct-t S 87.830 04 39.8” 69 151.641 " gunman. a! hunch do!“ mine-u: db ”1319,33 to the than... any. the an" “new n traveling . warned 3 Nu! by writ. -ru and Mb,- Wo "In an! .m was um _ Hm. as con- I1 than. we hat. hr am- on tho wt .md - ir,Gi mun gll "trtuow, n ro-ml by ‘M pol, not to you on at Jeriod all aiim funny. uh] "' I tho "you. Gross A“ no: in Voice. ”5.781 on 475 093 03 203.749 " 350.788 37 my. 53 918.!” n "36.845 " 147.114 09 145.448 9t t of "loo-I. intormxt In. orsartstutatq "In an! Indium I. cunsmul‘ 71-4lo 3r Humid-000 t mm d report. to holder: on 268 M “Mull, orsoetho Hive. "s. kind. pl) wilt ill S. 300 9.630 nurse or Dr. Tnlmn‘e in mm Per- mm " this time when . wide- .pmd ellort for religion- "when!“ 1. being made. Text, Luke v, a: "They enclosed a great multitude of label, end their net brake." almon and his conned" had experi- enced the night before Win: tutter- men call "poor luck." Christ steps on board the ttshine smack and tell: the tailors to pull may from thig such end directs them min to link the net. Sure enough, the net in full of tuhea, and the “Horn begin to Inn! ln. So large 1 school ot tttthen vu- uken that the hardy men begin to look red m the face us they pull, end hudly have they begun to redoiee It their success when an": goes n thread ot the net. nnd snap goes another thread, no there is danger not only of losing the tun, but of losing the net. Without much care In to how much the boat tilts or how much Inter is ”turned on deck the unharmen rush “out. qattterinq up the broken meshe- of the net. Out yonder there In I an“) “new; on the wave, and they In" It "t"sttltt .hoy! Bear down this wuy!" The. ship comes, and both boats. both tuttt- In; smacks, are tmed with the ttougtder- mg treasures. "Ah." says some one, "how much better It would have been If they had stayed on more and "tted with n hook and line and taken one u a time, innoad of having this great "xeiternent and the boat almost uplet :nd the net broken, and having to cull tor help and getting nopplng wet with the sea." The church in the boat, the gospel u the net, society is the no, end a greet revival in a whole school brought h " one sweep of the net. I have ad- miration tor that man who goes out with a hook and line to ttah. I admire the way he unwind. the reel and ad- just. the bait and drops the hook in a quiet place on a. still afternoon. and here catches one. and there one, but I like also a big boat end n large crew and a net a mile long and swift one and stout sails and a stiff breeze and . great multitude of souls brought-oo great a multitude that you hove to get help to draw it ashore. staining the net to the utmoN until it tare-kl here and there, letting n few "cape, but bringing the great multitude into eter- nal safety. In other words, I believe in revivtll. The great work of saving men begun with 3.000 people Joining the church in one day, and it will close with forty or u hundred million people nved In twen- ty-four hours when nations shall be born In a day. But there are objections to revivals. People are opposed to them because the net might get brok- an. and if by the pressure of will: it does not get broken. then they take their own penknives and slit the net. "They enclosed a great multitude of ushes, and the net brake." it is sometimes append to revival. of religion that those who come into the church at such times do not hold out. " long as there is a gale of blessing they have their sails up. But " noon on strong winds stop blowing then they drop into a dead calm. But what or? the (not: in the cue? In all our churches the vast mujority ot the use- ful people are those who ere brought a ander great awakeningl. and they hold out. Who are the prominent men in the Unlced States churchel. in pray- er meetinu. in Sabbath schooll? For the moat pnrt they are the product of neat nkaenings. l have noticed that those who ore brought into the kingdom of God through rant-nix have more persist- Pru'e and more determination in the t'hristian lira than those who come In undnr l low state of religion. Peo- Die born In an ivehouse mar live. But they will novel“ get over the cold they caught in the ioohouse. A con- un ball depends upon the Impulse with whioh it starts for how far " Ihaii go, and how swiftly. and the treats-:- the revival force with which a soul ts started the more far-reach- ing and far-resounding will be the exe- vu'lnu, But i.- .s noun-times objected to re- Hut :? ,N 'sometimes objected to re- mals that therein so much excite- ment that people mistake hysteril. for religion. W.- admit that in every re- 'tva! ot reuginn there is either a nun- nesswd or a demonstrated excitment. Indeed, If a man can go out ot a. state Mrotuiemnation into A state of aeeept- Once with God or see others so without any agitatinn of soul he is in an un- hnuhy. max-bu state and is " repul- MH and absurd an a man who should hour ho saw a Milk! snatched out from under a horse's hoot: and felt no llitafinn o" saw a man rammed from the fourth story of a house on ttre and Waphmtqn {apart - This die. “at ls What I “I do "one": tated I tt make tend ll lakes ‘ then It a. We”... whose hymn. will be sun: all down the ages. we: converted at nine Mn of age; Jonathan Edwards, ”than the mightiest intellect that the American pulpit ever produced, we. converted at seven year- of In. and that father and mother mite an awful responsibility when they tell ther child at seven years ot we. "You ere too young to be a Christian," or, "You are too young to connect your- self with the church." That is a minute as long us eternity. of on and the other in forty 'ee" ot use, I will hive more contidenee in the profusion of religion of the one ten years of use than the one forty Venn of use. Why? The one who professes at forty years ot age he: for- ty your: of impulse in the wrong di- rection to correct, and the child hes only ten years in the wrong direc- tion to correct. Four times ten ere forty. Four times the religious Apron- pect for the lad that comes Into the kingdom of God end into the church at ten years ot use than the man ttt forty. It during ii rei/Gi"im, persons present themselves as candidates for the church, and the one In ten year! I em very apt to look upon re- vivnll a: connected with certain men who fostered them. People who in thitt day do not like revival. never- theleu have not words to empresl their admiration for the rr.vitratista ot the past, for they were revivalists --3onatun Edwards. John Wester, George Whitfield, Fletcher, Griffin. bum, Osborne. Knapp. Nettleton. Moody and meny others whose name! come to my mind. The strength of their intellect and the holiness of their lives make me think they would not have had anything to do with that which wns ephemeral. Oh, it is easy to talk against revivals! A man said to Mr. Dawson: "I like your sermons very much, but the alter meetings Idesplse. When the prayer meeting begins I all!!!” to up into the gallery and look down and I am Manama. "Well," said Mr. Dawson. “the reason is you so on the top of your neighbor‘s house and look down his chimney to extmé inc his tIre, and of course you set only smoke in your eyes. Why don't you come in the door and sit down and warm?" Oh. I am afraid to say anything against revivals of religion or against anything that looks like them, because I think it my be a sin against the Holy Ghost. and you know the Bible says 1.th t sin against the Holy Ghost shell never be forgiven. neither in this world nor the world to come. Now, it you are 1 painter and I speak minst your pictures, do I not speak against you? " you are an architect, and I speak against a building you put up, do I not speak against you'. It a re- vival be the work of the Holy Ghost. and I speak against that revival, do I not speak against the Holy Ghost? And who speaketh against the Holy Ghost, says the Bible, he shall never be forgiven. neither in this world nor in the world to come. I think Bome- times people have made a nun mis- take in this direction. Now I rome to the real genuine cause of objections to revivsis. That is the coldness of the objector. It is the secret and hidden but unmistak- able cause in every cue. a. low state of religion in the heart. Wide awake, consecrated. useful Christians are nee- er straid of revivals. It is the spir- itually dead who are afraid of hevin: their sepiiieher molested. The chief agents of the devil during a great awakening are always unconverted professors of religion. An soon as Christ's work begins they begin to gossip against it, and take . pail of water and try to put out this spark of religious iniiuem-e. and they try to put out another spark. Do they succeed? As well when Chicago was on ttre might some one have gone out with a. garden water pot trying to extinguish it. The difficulty is that when a re- vival begins in a church it begins at so many points that while you have doused one anxious soul withta pail of cold water there are 500 other snxious soul: on tire. Ott, how much better it would be to lay hold of the chariot ot Christ's gospel and help pull it on rather than to tting ourselves in front of the wheels trying to block their progress. We will not stop the chm-lot. but we ourselves will be ground to powder. .. . . . men whose hearts have never been changed by grace. They are all an- tagonistic to revivals. How did they get into the ministry? Perhaps some of them chose it as a respectable pro- fession. Perhaps some chose it as a means of livelihood. Perhaps some of them were sincere. but were mistaken. As Thomas Chalmers said, he had been many years preaching' the 303- pel before his heart had been changed. and as many ministers of the gospel declare they were preaching and had been ordained to sacred orders years and years before their hearts were re- generated. Gracious God, what a soi- emn thought for those of us who min- ister at the altar! With the present ministry in the present temperature of piety, this land will never be envel- oped with revivals. While the pews on one side of the altar cry for mercy. the pulpit: on the other side the altar must cry for mercy. Ministers quab reling. Ministers trying to pull each other down. Ministers struggling tor ecclesiastical place. Ministers lethar- gic with whole congregations dying on their hands. What a spectacle! a - _. ... _...I.- "-eg. WW..-“ But I think, after all. the greatest obstacle to revivals throughout Chris- tendom is an unconverted ministry. We must believe that the vast major- ity of those who cruciate at sacred al- tara are regenerated. But I suppose there may ttoat into the ministry of all the denominations of Christians Al'uuatu y...,.-- pews. Pulplts aname will make pews atlame. Everybody believes in a; re- vdval in trade, everybody llkes . re- vival in literature. everybody likes a revival in art, yet a great multltude cannot understand a. revival in mat- ter. of religion. Depend upon It. where you and a man antagonistic to revi- vals, whether he be In pulpit or pew, make aroused he need: to be regenentcd by the (me of God. or 200 years without revivals Chris- tianity will be practically extinct. It in a. matter ot astounding arithmetic. In etch ot our modern generation. there are at least 82,000,000 children. Now add 32,000,000 to the world's pop- ulation and then have only 100,000 or I could prove to . demonstration that without revlvuls this world will 'teve! be' converted. and that In 100 200,000 converted every year. and how long before the world will be and? Never-absolutely never'. We talk A. good deal about the good times that are coming and about the world's reddnptlon. How long before they will come? There is a man who says 500 years. Here is some one more ttonfldent who says in 60 years. What, 50 years , Do You propose to let two generations pass ott the stage before the world is converted? Suppose by prolongation of human life at the end of the next " Years you should walk the length of Pennsylvania svenue, Washington, or the length of Broadway, New York. In all those walks you would not find one person that you recognise. Why'. All dead or so changed you would not know them. In other words. it you postpone the redemption of this world for so years you admit that the mo.- Jority of the two whole generstlons shall so " the stage unblessed and unsaved. I tell you the church of Jesus Christ Cannot consent to it. We must pray and toil and have the revi- val spirit and we must struggle to have the whole world saved before the men and women now in middle life part, "Oh," you say. " it is too vast an enterprise to be conducted in so short a time." Do you know how long it would take to save the whole world It each man would bring another? It would take ten years. By a. calcula- tion in compound interest, each man bringing another and that one another and that one another, in ten years the whole earth would be Baved--1911. Be- tore the organs in our churches are worn out they ought to sound the grand march ot the whole earth saved. If the world is not saved in the next ten years, it will be the fault of the church of Christ. But it will all de- pend upon the revival spirit. The hook and line tiahinrt will not do it. In some of the attributes of the Lord we seem to shame on a small scale. For instance, in His love and in His kindness. But until of late foreknowledge, omniscience, omnipre- senee, omnipotence. seem to have been exclusively God's possession. God, desiring to make the race like himself, gave us a species of the fore- knowledge in the weather probabili- ties, gives us a species of omniscience in teletrraphy, gives us a species ot omnipresence in the telephone, gives I will tell you what next. Next, a stupendous religious movement. Next, the end ot war. Next, the cash of despotism. Next, the world's expur‘a- tion. Next, the tftriatiike dominion. Next, the Judgment. What become: of the world after that I care not. It will have suffered and achieved enough tor one world. Lay it up in the dockyurds of eternity, like an old mnn-ot-wnr gone out ot service. or fit " up like a constellation to parry bread of relief to some other suffering planet. or let it be demolished. Farewell, dear old world, that began- with pandise and ended with judgment eonflngravtion. . us a species of omnipotence in the steam power. Discoveries and inven- tions all around about us, people are asking what next? Last summer I stood on the Isle of Wight, and I had pointed out to me the place where the Eurydice sank with 200 or 300 young men who were in training for the British navy. You remember when that training ship went down there was a thrill of horror all oxer the world. Since then there was an- other training ship missing, the At- lanta, gone down with all on hoard. By order of her majesty's government vessels went cruising up and down the Atlantic trying to find that lost train- ing ship in which there were so many young men preparing tor the British navy. Alas, for the lost Atlanta! Oh, my friends, this world is only a train- ing ship. On it we are training for heaven. The old ship sails up and down the ocean of immensity, now through the dark waves ot midnight, now through the golden crested wave of the morn, but sails on and sails on. After awhile her work will be done. and the inhabitants of heaven will look out and find a world missing. The cry will be: "Where is that earth where Christ died and the human race was emancipated? Send out tteets of angels to tind the missing craft." Let them sail up and down, cruise up and down the ocean of eternity, and they will catch not one glimpse ot her mountain masts or her topgallants of ttoating cloud. Gone down'. The training ship of a world perished in the last tornado. Oh, let it not be that she goes down with all on board, but rather may it be said of her passengers. as it was said of the drenched passengers of the Alexandrlan corn ship that crashed into the breakers of Melita. "They all escaped safe to land!" Elevator mm in the northeastern portion of South Dakota are alarmed over u discovrry made by H. H. Swift, who operates a grain elevator at Henry. While shipping grain he dis- covered in the middle of a. huge bin M wheat what he nrtrt supposed were large bunches of molded wheat. but which upon closer inspection proved to be n mass of small parasites, very much alive. Under a powerful micro- scope they were seen to have eight legs, each leg having two feelers. Although Mr. Ba m in an experienced grain man. he has never before seen anything or the kind, and no one else has as yet been able to classify the parasite. A portion of the mass has been sent to the South Dakota Agri- cultural College, at Brookings, for inspection by professors there. Whe- ther similar parasite» have gained a foothold In other bins of wheat has not yet been ascertained. The resignation ot Lieut.-Col. De. lamere, who for tho last five years has commanded the Queen‘s Own Rb flee, is now before the military an. tum-Mes. The formal gazette has not yet appeared, but it is certain that the Queen’s Own will not this you parade under the Colonel. A New Grain Paraslle. Commentary - Connecting Links. Comparing the accounts ot (inch evangemn we conclude mat. efary “alone. on seeing the “one rolled fwfr, concluded at once that. the: SUNDAY SCHOOL “"“J, bwcluuuu an vuyu usu- ”a body of Jesus had been removed, and hurried back to Jermlem to tell Peter and John. While one was gone .ttte other Mary an} Salome ventured Mto the Ie-pulcllre and saw an angel clothed in a long, white garment. who assured them that Jesus was risen. and bado them carry the news to His disciples. Th-oy hastened wlth "tear and great joy." On hearing the report ot Mary Magdalene, Peter 51nd John hurried to the tomb and inspected it. They did not see the angel, but found that. the Saviour was not were. Mary Magdalene re. turned to the tomb and remained there, weeping after Peter and John had left. SIN! swap-ed dawn and looked into tho tomb. Two angels "NaMutAEtoNgu, mason no. u. APRIL 14, MMM. were 'fttingt there and asked her why one wept. Thin explanation agrees with that of Dr. Townaon and others 11. Mary-This was Mary Magda- lene out of whom the Lord had cast Haven devils. "The epithet *Magdu- leoo,' whatever may be its meaning. seem woman for the express purpose of distinguishing her from all other Mhry.."-ts'mith't' Die. Stood without --Peter and John going (v. 10) com. mends Mary's staying. 12. Two aniteltr--Peter and John did not no the (mm-ls. The angels' presence showed the divine hand and came. They were ministering splrlts to comfort those who were in such graham-row and need, and they gave explanation or what had been done, no one else being able. 13. Why weepest thou--Are you quite sure that this empty tomb do" not show that you ought to be re- juicing '.'--Rylo. Taken away my Loru--"Whiio the other woman were terrified. Mary seams to have had no fear, so wholly was she taken up with her grout drain of finding her 14. 'l‘urnml hnraolf btictr--f3titl wrap. in: aha turned may from the an, gels. “She turned to go again with the other women to Jerusalem. who had already departed; but she had not as yet gone so. tar as to be out of the garden." 15. Jesus with onto tter-This was His first appearance. He afterward appeared on this some day to the other women returning trom the mpulchrr- (Matt. xxvill. 9, IO), to Pet- er tLuiry xxiv. 34). to twodkzclples Ro- ing to Emmaus (Luke xxiv. 13-31). and to ten npostlea. John xx. 19-2G. Why weapest thou--Bhe had t%rttt.'O' trutticieatt to rejoice instead of to weep. Whom sonic-It thou--He marks to comfort her in: her grout grief. The trarietter--hetd therefore a ser- vant of Joseph of Arianatlwn. who owned tho tomb. and who, of course, would be frlmully. No other pernon would ho likely to be there at an early on itot1r.--Pttloubet. Have borne mm hemse--Thlnking that perhaps Joseph had ordered His body taken to some other place. I will take Him tsway-tFr would no that it was don-8. She would be responsible for His removal to a proper place. 16. Marr-Jean" stirred the ttttee- tion of the weeping woman at His lido by uttering her own name I" tones that thrilled her to the heart and created the new. sublime con- viction that He had risen no He had said. Itabbooi--M.r Master. "A wholv world of emotion and duration in n word." As Mary uttered the word she must havo umimvorpd in {all down at tho (out of her Lord, embracing; them.--ectuUr. IT. Touch mo mrte-ltinit not to me."-Clarke. The translation "touch me not" gives " {also impres- sion; the verb dons not inc-an to "touch," .but to “hold on to" and “cling to." I am not yot ascend» eu-Mary nppenru to how held him by the foot. and worshippi-d him. "Jesus says in “Hertz t9poi no longer time with me now. I aim not going immediately to honwn, you will have amoral opportunities of new» in; me again; but go and tollmy Father and God, who is gour Father and God also; tileroforv. let them take courage." (in to my brethren .--Firtrt servants. then Uitsvipletr,tlteu friends; now, utter the resurrection. brethren.-f, F. & B. This involves in itself Mel-mi Inheritance-Put. Com. I ascend unto my Father--. am clothing In) self with my rlernai form; I have laid down my life that I might take it again and mic it for tho highest biennium-so of my trrethreu.---Pul. Com. My Father...... Your Fathpr......My God and your God-Father of Christ by nature and of men by gruce.---Wtureott. His God only in connection with us; our God only in connection with him. “Ii iitiry told the dikipletr--"An apostle to the apostles." Mary was the first to see Jesus and_tl|e 1ttt ii," pGGiailil His resurrection. Thls Special message was clearly givento the woman who held his peep. _ The resurrection revived the dead hopes of the disciples. Think of the excitement. the Joy, the holy emo- tiona that thrilled the hearts of Chrilt‘s followers on the resurrec- tion day, which John called the Lord's day. and which tho Christian church has sinca that time sacrmlly oblerved as the Christian Sabbath. From that day tho disciples went forth like new men, ever ready to lay down thnir lives for the truth they preached. Thoughter.-Christ is novpr far away when our hearts are burdened to see Him. Mary was looking In the wrong plum for Christ; tombs could not hold Him. neither will they be able to hold His saints. How often we weep when there is no occasion for weeping; if Mary had known the truth aha would have been rejoicing instead of weeping. PRACTICAL SURVEY. The scene is laid in the garden early on tho morning of the third day. Mary Magdalene and Mary the moth- er of James and Salome had come very early in the morning and had found tho stone rolled away and the body of Jesus gone. Mark xvi. 1; Luke XXIV. 1-3. The vision of angels appears to them announcing the re- surrection of Jesus. Returning to the city they tell of the empty tomb. Peter and John run to the cepulchre and find even as they hays been told. -hto villon of angels. Many of " have stood by the graves of friends and loved ones, We have felt the iron Jesus Appears to Marr-John.. trt8 of narrow enter into our hearts " tho grove. he. closed over the tom) of than; we loved. But we cannot conceive the double Morrow of the dimlplei at the death of Jesus. To the love they bore Him my brother. teacher and friend Wan added their faith In mm u a deliverer. Ina death to them was the death ot faith and hope. Attection lingers around the spot when the forms of loved one- Ite. But the Intel. appear with the manage. "He in risen." Ith, the joy to them when they come to realize it! Bo to us when we have come to see the enter lining to home of God‘s clouds. _ Vriaaprrearanee of the Master. We do not alwayq trt ti.reit recognize Hing or Bin voice. Mary's mm are dull of hearing, her eyes dim with weeping. her heart heavy with Darrow. an] the recognizes neither the mix-o nor the features ot tlty Master at first. It is often thus with (iod'l pamph'. opproesed by the burdens, care mu! sorrows of Ma they full to revognir" the voice of mm n ho hm; mi l, “I will never leave thee, nor fursnko tluw." Mary’s Joy at recognizing Him. Who can measure the glad surprise. the Joyful rmognltlun. the 1ttexprvtmitriis rapture commented in her expres- sion, "nabbonl"? "My Master," or, porltape, more literally, "My great Master." Words a.re too weak to givv expresslon to the thought. We can only imagine tho omutiun of our awn hearts had we been in her place. otten 5 voice has (fame to us. and our hearts leaped with toy as we have recognized our l'.Mturter." The effect of the resurrection and appearance of Jenna upon the till- cipleo. When Jesus howod His head and “gave up the ghost" faith died in their hearts. But as they look upon the empty tomb, then look in His [are and hear His voice, with and hope revive an t courage is renewed. ”Jew: and tho remrrectlon" hummus their theme. Through mun in Him they accomplish wonders; the hope he in- spires in their heart. trivets them courage to "endurv hmdnem as good soldiers of Jun! C'hritrt," The grout need of the church loamy in tho faith. tho hope, the murals.) in-pirml by tho revelation of the living Chritrt in the midst. t THE ONTARIO HOSPITALS. Nanny Thirty I‘llmuand rum-nu Were Treated Last Yrar. Hon. Mr. Stratum him insuvd the tturta-ttrtrt annual Import UH horpit- :Lls. Homes of liA-fugv, Orphan) mi)- Iuma, Homes for luvuruhlvs, ('mn'ul- accent Homes and Manual-cu Asylums tor the year ”Min; h'tltlt September. 1900. The hospitals in (In- Pvoviuce Lune bar between GO and 6 J, mm are Nitliv ate] in nearly ou-r) town and city. The 'mereneed number of Immune during Um past ,H-ur is an: indication ol the conildonuv nniuh the puhllv have m their ellicivum. C'ouAderubl" lmprowmvnt has bum-n made durum; the year as to their rvfitting. fur- niamng and sauna” nulldiliull. It. a plum; nave becn itddt‘d lo tlle list of charities receiving hmm-nnM-nt all at Sun“ Ste. Marie an! Parry Sound. The number of pallientn Humming: in the Various hospitals nu the In October, 1900, wax 1,893. The num- her or patients' admitted during Um 5er was $7.06!, an! 11w total num- ber of panama unm-r trcutmirut dur- "ur the year was 119.761. "I hr numb: I of apathy during llw year WM l.4hl, an! tho number of dayn‘ stay of pu- tttttttro in the hospital was 739816. The res 9mm from an mun-es, nth" than the Govvrnment grant, “an $198,579.17; the Proxinciat gram tor “In past your was $110,000. ticot land‘s l'hys‘vnl Distinction.» Bun Nevis. thr hi host mountain in H-ullzuul. is nlm) 'de Mam-st in th" British Iris. It Hum to a Dwight of 4.406 feet, willie Snuwdnu. Ccarutuut and Souwh‘ll. the highest mountains in Wall's. [rt-hum and England, only rim- to llvightn of 3,570, 3,4” and 3,166 feet. Loch Lumunzl. tho lurguzt tq.ottish Lake, is the lnrgunt lake in ”rt-at Britain. 11mm!" Lough Rough, in Ireland. is the lurgvst in the Un- ited Kingdom. Tho Tau. which drums u Larger area than an) other river in Root- land. and which. murun‘cr. is [ml by many great "alrrs. curries to tho Alt-u n greatm- mlumc of water (nun any other r'rver in the three king- dome, not pxvludrrrtt the Thames, the Severn, or the Shannon. Ot Hanna: of Rummy tor Old Peo- ple. orpiinmi Homes, and Magdalen usluns thore are 100 in the l'rrm Vim-0, having an aggregate populn- tion of 5,012. an] a p'wlrl) "xpvudi- turn for turn m'tinU-uuum- 0! S231,- 602.53. of Wllit'h unrmnt tlie Pro- “no.“ contribuuw 'c62.0rl7.Ut. ttttts county nulumriul Home is lo ho am!- ml to thy “it! at this int-Minx: of 1m- IAsritolutitrtr. mumely, the count) of Esq-x. Lewis. the largest imam in Foot- tiarh waters. is has” than any is Land-not valuding the Isle of Mutt-- In English or Irish waters. 1Cspondvd tor the uminlvnzmw- ot lwqutnlu during tlie. JPur. $570: 150.226; nyeraW' coal per (in) put pu- ticnt was 831-250. 'Ime pun-mug? of l’ron-lnl gram to tastttl "otpvntlitur" tor. muintttnantw won :3 per vent. '>TrwT" II, VI tun “nu-nu"... Cantiro in the largest British Itett- insula. Quietly so called. Urlmey and Batu. alum: with Ang- tettey, have the dirrt'mr.tiott of being the only British oountlm that urn purely insular. Inverneas. Russ and Sutherland are tho only Brawn counties that haw an mat must wan-mm by the Ger- man Ocean). and a want coast wash- “! by thv Atlantic. In every Catholic church all owr the world a "pun-hm." or “liastvr cantlie." madn uf purest was, bi bletrc- ed on Holy Fktturda.v, tho day twinn- Easter. by a rivm-on. who “XOR an ite base tive grams ot inct-nm- in memory at the “w wounds or Jesus and tht, proclrmu spirum whvrpwith He was anulntnl in the tomb. Anciently tho torch was a huge " taJr. Ono mar“! at t'antt'rbury, Eng- land, in 1437. weiglwd three hundred pounds. Another. at Norwich, Will; no high that it was lighted by means ot an or1flee In the roof ot the choir. Yo report has been rucelwed from Gen. Marhrthur eoneernintr the ab leged fraud. in the disposition of government supplies in the Phil- lem. " ' ' , From Banter until Whitsunday the paxhul candle burn on the muspvl side of tho altar during mass and vapors. as n symbol that (‘hriat, the light of tho world, has risen from the grave. _ . k The Pam-Ind t and". ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Chicago... Now York Milwaukee Follmrmg are the Mons at imirortartt urea to-day: - St. Louie... ...... q Toledo... ...... ... ... Detroit. red... ... Detroit. white ... Oats word steady; 20) bulholl cold at 34 1-2 to Me. Duluth Norttuaat ... ... ... 07.134 0731-! Duluth, No. 1 hard... ... ... ... ... 075 3-4 -- ' Minnenpnlh. No. l Northern...... .eF ... -..- 0711-2 , oral-(o Farmers' erket. lhnrht--Btttad.v, 100 bushel- selling at " to ATe. But ter-Thr, rccolpta of chulca new- ly-mxule dairy pound mm were “It; then- wal a, good dvmnd. and the market was steady at 20 to 220.. and a few rum cholcu, small Iota brgught a. cent or two more. _ Ege--'rttere were a good mnny of termi. but the demand WM fur. sad the market was steady. with cale- at IG. 16 and 170. Poultry-The otrcrutqa were tur, (hero was a good demand and the market may} steady, _ Hay and Btrtos--The receipt- were not large. the dr-mand only (Mr. and the marth was vanivr, M load. of hay telling at $13 to $14.50. and three loads of straw at s.) to "Mt. Dressed Hog-Jim 1-9 mrv mot very many offered . the tlvmzmd Wu! keen. and the market was higher, with sales at 88 to $8.40. Toronto Live truteit ”Arlen. Export mrttle,ehoioe. per out. " tG lo ' Export osttle.tiqttt, norm"... 4 " In Export cows.... ._..ww_T._.w. 326 to Butchera'cnule ptnkesd..,..... 4 (I) to Putehesrkcmrle,uotce., ...... a " to Hugvhenlmtue Iroott.......... 5;; to do medium, mixed.. ....... Rutrhertootnmon. oer cwt... unlimexmn. heavy. per ewt. Bullr.ero9rrnigrtttd per mum Feeder-hott-emo ...... ..... domedium.......... .. , v. dolittht, w.............. 't'tockem. Mttttotttt0ttm......._, off-color: and ttttitem. . . . . .._ Feeding bullet....., .__...... Light clock bull. per cwt. p.. mmnoowmeoch... .........' 2ug,ttgf,2tt1ac.aiiar. .menmxport ewes. per cart. do.buuh.................... Shoeg. bumberu'. out: . . . . . . .. hula u.(nun-l'etl.pc-r out, . do baruyud.percwt....... do Spring. “all. '.".__F. Holt“. Choice. Der cwt........ Hogs. (at. per ow:........... 800.1th per ttwb.......... Bows,pisrowi........,......... ERIK: '_.'.....'..... ..t...r_.. Manual). Wtteat Mcrkcn. Tlmrn ls still no clung" in the situ ation my rogunha Manitoba WM“. Prim-u are ttttout thy mum: as n week “gown. l lmrd My. No. 2 hard Toe, No, 3 hard (5814c. No. " northern "3re, tough No. 3 hard 63c, tough No. a northern 59v. all m "tores In. Fort William, spot or on rum». The mur- km do!!! dull and inactive at 08 1-20 tor No. 3 hard at Fort Willlnm. In tho luau-r" ttottusyrte of the prairie rvtrirrn no set-ding has been done yet, hm thr, mev-r. which has been wry Cuus., in quite mlld today; and run doubt eroding: will commence next wvek in now [urns at Ivan. of Mani. {ohm zim-iim- was (my $‘i,l:.UUUz) burlwla. Uit.uttrrr. of u 1'uvlirt" of 5.5w000 was nearly mot by " gain " 4.700.- 000 huslwls Ill Eurnpv and tho larg- tl' part of the nu Hum-tin" wu (nutribulmi by Aimlrulmn “mks. whirl: {1-H oft 2.700 (I00 lumiwlu. Tho tutu] war-M's stock. as rc-prirtt-d by lvlvgrnpil and onhiv to Irrmititroot'et. was 175,076.00” hurtiu‘ls on Aprll in. ttgained I7H.~1!Ni.000 burrlteln on Marvin Irt; 17."r,1irii'i.i0, hushc-ln on \pril leet " y‘ur "go, and 134.703.- 000 buplu‘ls on April ”1,1999. I-luro Ptuun Mocks last Saturday were tho largest aim-v Dov. Int. 1800. Amari- mn "locks are 5.000000 hunlwla Muller than a your mm. but L'B.. 1KKl.000 Iarttor than April, 1899. BrndsIrc-rl’s ml l‘rnde. Business at Montreal In" been only fair this wevk. C'ountry remittanca am might hr r.xtrr'vted at till. lec- nm. are a little slam”. in some aides. There in no reason for (maplnlnt "bout the "mount at trade twin; dorm in wholveale eircie" at Tor- onto. Tttere is u di.<yvmitiun appar- ont on the [ml of many rotation. however. to gm. tlu-ir orders in the hawk of johlrrs in order to got the lines wanted and at current prices. Trade at Wmnipng has tween stimu- lated by mild wwtiwr. The leelln‘ “pm-urn to tr" tint tin cotttintt len- run will show a lump improvement rover In»! ymr. Th- whulvsuln flrml at Hamilton report mmth-r My week. Truvah-rn on tlio Vurio. routine arr r-vrxurting a steady Il- crmw in luminous. and the general outlook for the spring and summer is wry encouraging. There has bee- quite an active mow‘mont in the Job. bring trade at London. Values ar" fun tor staph- g'oodu. Business at the Pnctfle coast citlu is look": up. At Ottawa tin-m has been eon-Ida!- nble movement in lighter good; and numy orders for heavy line- for chip- ment later are being booked by a. wholemlo trade. Wool. Thl"ro lll'l" Import» ot hirrmi' lmprout man in the United Staten markets. but the Ioml trade is dull In the " Homw of any "stsurt dmnand. Price. are unclmngml. bne1w.re--Tltere " no chant? in the mnrkvt and prism are nominally ul- rhcmg't-d for 1900 Hip at 13¢ to 14c and km to 90 tor unwanhml. Pulled WorF--Tlte market is (lull. Prtvore :Irp steady at 10 to ITe tor "upon: and 19 to 20e tor oxtrul. It is rayon-My: Nut. Mr. Awlmw far, oetdo mm to calm the qua-tb- ot a subsidized stag» by the endow. ment ot mantras in London and New York tor the elevation ot me an... Arvording to "ttble whim! reed?- ul tho demand ror homes In: the loading market in improving. non-e- qucntly prime; are [inning up. Mm". Shy-plu-rd & Grand, of Liverpool. nah]:- W. G. Elliott. who rerrresenta Ihrm horn that (suits of heavy how”! were made at from C40 to 1.58 "ueh, null 'Ira-rs at £38; also that Winners and 'tras Inn-sea were wuntrd, and tt piood truth was ex. [nu-1m! in those Muses. (cm-um" Mu rah over last your. The at Hamilton report week. Truw-llvrs routes are r-l‘rxlrtm- The Markets The World's " he.“ Supply. The wurld'r: slut-k of wheat do "mused about twicts as much in arch an: in “unwary. but tho net 't-I'mv was (my $5.121) 00‘.) bushvll. ”ending N no.“ No. 1' "te Hun-r 'rrude Cash 073 074 075 " 076 0767-8 076 - Man-kn... (‘qulng quota- wheat cen- to i2 "

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