L don't know you've got "lon't believe it; you >clicvc it-till you are to. Then it is danger. 1""; gowns. Chant-u. oronto. - Toronto: __ and 61.003.110l’m have mot triad It. and†toi. its agreeable taut. t t be afraid; but attend ick-- you can do it you. l at home. , Scott's Emulsion (I yer Oil. and live cam. o means, the dreadful it is thought to be-- ty " __ 1 -- L L 1 ',rttice',ttirt, ALKIIV r l ll I 'ti WANTED. E N017 1901. gluing Flu! Tim." mm wane FENCE co. (my HUN†PROS I _ , min' _ I ELL-krw'ia'ah“ I uty 'O' ' hiarrhms. T"! DROPSY , lt, ‘H... A IN.', 'x v-vm'V family. h o I. per an); JA? mud doctrine, may think at if heeded, Win Treated Fm. 'ttrates -- n+2 03.10! m “an Peninsula, . If unil’oh on two mt' r: which in m tArttb Hum m one - " At ACT†be bult - ed harnin Add" o. box an, - .3031: C "C," -' _ ',t t.R 9,5315: t.N c k- "" rrsd d. "re L“! work I†r yorhnr MUD. " ’nmxn‘rkol. A I handle. “a mrr For M. ll tsoN t' whnlml'om l.’ no! mu- 3‘: m Hwy refund l, .uraukeed tor- r: stopped-- The trouble & CO vwl out how l A. quiet â€a wk until they "Ullhwnf‘. a .u u! ht-n w- Sent on Tre' Il llaunlltnl. _ ma Tho mad and exportâ€. MES mm 11 Gia n37. nirudnctk‘l d .w-nic to.“ arrh " '/',.Wfd'fl',t Ipr't' t gawk WIT. t Book ot um io in. " Mb?! “I Pth.' I" A \'D Mot N. Smith. hx'ssom .AsrAJiA. TN id'n. In H. Ont., l tt spends g N LADDER vim-r undo. rrndior i'f2 c. m ttt .rmer urea bands. ot6, totre,0thq Jraicttre scripttoo d 156‘ GA RD" tm. K. “on. PAID I. \Tl-JIMJII rw Bruno \A 300'». 1svard In "h Comm "titod. "and. OI. war III. ere h! aa. (m obonH All- w old tot Imam-1 unm an! IN TH truth N3 1 CAN I’. (â€min ONCE“. L- with m. on, apiece all around the tomb, and those spices were the seed that be- an to grow, and from them came “I the ttowerg of this Enter morn. The two angels robed in white took hold of the stone at the Savior's tomb. and they hurled it with such (one down the hill that it crushed in the door of the world's sepulcher Ind the stark and the dead must come forth. On this glorious Easter morning. amid the music and the flowers. 1 the you Christian sanitation. This morning Russian meeting Russian on the streets of St. Petersburg hails him with the salutation. "Christ is rhea!" and is answered by his friend in salutation. "He is risen Indeed!" In some parts of England and Ireland to this very day there is the superstition that on E1819? morning the sun dances in the heav- ens. And well may we forgive such a superstition, which illustrntes the faot that the natural world seems to sympathise with the spiritual. I care not how labyrintheine the mausoleum or how costly the sarco- phagus or however tbeautifully par- terted the family grounds. we want them all broken up by the Lord ot the resurrection. They must come out. Father and mother-they must cane out. Brother and alater--they must come out. Our darling chil- fren-they must come out. The eyes that we closed with such trembling fingers must opt‘n again in the radi- ance of that morn. The arms we folded in dust must Join ours in an embrace of reunion. The voice that In; hushed in our dwelling must be returned. on. how long some of you seem to be waiting for the resur- rection! And for uhese broken hearts to-day I make a soft, cool bandage out of Beater tlowers. T Talma‘e's Sermon on How the Lord Becomes the :23 " i, “First Fruits of Them That Slept 4, -.~H-)~H-4-H-2~H+H-H+l-H~H-Hâ€"+i-H-X-!+Z~Z~Z~H~H+H+X~H'!-H-H Wmhington rely-rt nuys- Tire grcnt i wart on the tinger. Explain the may); Fhrimlan festival. ('eleuraled in all twhy the oak leaf is different tron the "hurches is the theme of Dr. i the leaf of the hickory. Tell me hm Tarmatre's disr'oucse; I Corinthians, '; the Lord Almighty van mm the chaff) xv, SO: "Now Is Christ risen from I of his nrnnlpL-tena-r on a rose leaf. lot the dead and become the tirst fruits ask me ntter,tirrns about the rPsurrPC o.' them that slept." I tum I 03an answer. I will ask you 1 Hall, Easter morning'. Flowers! Mora! Alla! them a-voice. allot them a-tongue. all of them full ot npeeoh to-dar. I bend over one of he lilies, and l hear It say. "Con- dder the lilies of the field, how ther grow; they toil not. neither do they spin. yet Solomon in all his Mor, was not arrayed like one of there." I handover arose, andlt um: to whisper, "I am the rose ot Sharon."- And then I stand and linen. From all sides there comes me chorus of rsotvers, saying, "It God so clothed the grass of the tleld which to-day is and to-morrow " can! into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, ye ot lime faith?" Flowers! Flowers'. Braid them Into the bride's hair. Flowers! Flow- on! Straw them over the graves of the dead, sweet prophecy ot the resur- rection. Floweru! Flowers! Twist them into a garland for my Lord Jesus on Easter morning, and "Glory be to the Father. and to the Son. and to the Holy Ghost; as tt was tn the beginning. is. now and over mu be." The women came to the Sevtor'a tomb, and they dropped tutu an \ll‘>v» ,. _ _ queror. He rode on a black horse across Waterloo and Chslons and Atlanta. the bloody boots mushing the hearts of nations. It is the con- queror Death. He carries a black fuq, and he takes no prisoners. He digs a trench across the hemispheres and tills it with the carcasses of na- tions. Fifty times would the world hove been depopniated had not God kept making new generations. Fifty times would the world have been swung lifeless through the air-no nfan on the mountain. nu man on the sea. on abandoned ship plowing through immensity. Again and again has he done this work with all generations. He is a monarch as well as a conquer- or: his palace a sepuicher: his foun- tains the falling tears of a world. Blessed be God? In the light of this Easter morning I see the prophecy that his scepter shall be broken, and his pal- ace shall be demolished. The hour is coming when all who are in their raves shall come forth. Christ risen. we shalt rise. Jesus. "the first friuts of them that sient." Now, around this doctrine of the .‘esurrection there are a great many mysteries. You come to me and any. " the bodies of the dead ore to be raised. how is this and how is that? And you ask me a thousand ques- tions I am incompetent to snswer. But there are a great many things you believe that you are unable to “plain. You would be I very foolish man to say. “I won't believe anything I can't understand." Why, putting down one kind of flower seed. comes there up this tlower of this color? Why. putting down another flower seed,comes there up another tlower ot this color? the flower white. another - yel- tow, another tlower crimson. Why the dilerenoe when the seeds look to be very much aiitre-are very much alike? “b then things. Expisin that 1yo00ooo00ooooooooooooooooo F.qu'-PN-i-.ue.-."c.-i-i-iit-l? The Risers Christ m, You may that "the human body changes every seven years. and by 70 years of age a man has had ten bodies. In the resurrection which will come up?" You say: "A man will die and his body crumble into the dust, and that dust be taken up into the life of the Vegetable: an animal may eat the vegetable: men eat the animal. In the resurrection, that body, distributed in so many directions, how shall it be gathered up?" Have you any more questions of this style to ask? Come on and ask them. I do not pretend to an- swer them. I fall back upon the an- nouncement of God's word, "All who are in their grew-s shall come forth." You have noticed, I suppose, in read- Ing the story of the resurrection that almost ewry account of the Bible gives the idea that the oharacteristlc of that know that it will be very loud, but I day will he a great sound. I do not know it will be very penetrating. In the mausoleum where silence has reign- ed a thousand years that voice must penetrate. In the coral cave ot the deep that voice must penetrate. Mll- lions of spirits will come through the gates of eternity, and they will come to the tombs of the earth, and they will cry, "Give us bank our bodies; we gave them to you in corruption; sur- render them now in incorruptlon." Hundreds of spirits hovering about the fields of Gettysburg, for there the bod- ies are buried. A hundred thousand spirits earning to Greenwood, tor there the bodies are buried. waiting for the reunion ot body and soul. wart on the tInger. Explain the reason why the oak leaf is different from the leaf of the hickory. Tell me how the Lord Almighty can turn the chariot of his omnipotence on a rose leaf. You ask me questions about the resurrec- tion I cannot answer. I will ask you a. thousand questions about everyday life you cannot answer. I tind my strength in this passage. "All who are in their graves shall come form." I do not pretend to make the explanation. You So on and say: "Suppose a returned missionary dies in this city. When he was in China his foot was amputated; he lived years nner in England. and there he had an arm amputated; he is buried to-day in yonder cemetery. In the res- urrection will the foot come from China. will the arm come from Eng- land, and will the different parts of the body be reconstruvted in the regurrec- tion? How is that possible?" All along the sea route from New York to Liverpool, at every few miles where a Steamer went down, departed spirits coming back, hovering over the wave. There is where the City of Boston perished. Found at last. There is where the President perished. Steamer found at last. There is where the Central America went down. Spir- its hovering, hundreds of spirits hov- ering, waiting for the reunion ot body and soul. Out on the prairie a. spirit alights. There is where a. traveter died in the snnw. Crash goes Westminster Abbey, and the poets and the orator: come forth: wonderful mingling ot good and bad. Crash 50 the pyramids of Egypt, and the monarchs come forth. Who ran sketch the scene? I sup- pose that one moment before that general rising there will be an entire silence, save as you hear the grinding of a wheel or the clatter ot the hoots or a procession passing into the ceme- tery. Silence in all the caves of the earth. Sllence on the side ot the mountain. Silence down in the val- leys and far out into the sea. Silence. But in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, as the archangel's trumpet comes pealing. rolling. crashing. across the mountain and sea, the earth will give one terrme shudder.and the graves of the dead will heave like the waves of the sea. and Ostend, Sebastopol and Chalons will stalk forth in the lurid air. and the drowned will come up and “ring: out their wet locks above the billows, and all the land and all the sea berome one moving mass of life-mil faces, all ages. all condi- tions, gazing in one direction and upon one throrw-the throne of reseurrec- tion. "All who are in their graves shall come forth." "But." you say. "if this doctrine ot the resurrection is true, as prengured by this Easter morning. can you tell us some-thing about the resurrected body?" I can. There are mysteries about that, but I shall tell you three or four things in regard to the resur- rected body that are beyond guessing and beyond mistake. But in the morning of the resurrection the body will be adorned and beautltied according to the original model. And there is no such difference between a gymnast and an emaciated wretch in a lazaretto as there will be a difference between our bodies as they are now and our resurrected forms. There ycu will see the perfect eye after the waters of death have washed out the saint: of tears and study. There you will eee the perfect hand after the knots ot toil have been untied from the knuckles. There you will see the form erect and elastic after the burdens have zone " the Bhoulder--the very life of God in the body. In this world the most im- massive thing. the most expressive thing. is the human face, but that face is veiled with the griet's of a thousand years. But in the resurrection morn that veil will be taken may from the face. and the noonday sun is dull and dim and stupid compared with the out- murtirrtr glories ot the countenance: of the saved. When those he†of the righteou those resurrected feces. turn In the first place. 1 remark in regard to your resurret-ted body, it will be a glorious lxmly. The body we have now is a more skeleton of what it would have been it sin had not marred and defaced it. Take the most exquisite statue that was ever made by an artist and chip it here and chip it there with a chisel and batter and bruise it here and there and then sttnd it out in the storms of a hundred years and the beauty would be gone. Well, the hu- man body has been chipped and bat- tered and bruised and damaged with the storms of thousands of years-the physical defects of other generations coming down from generation to tren- eration, we inheriting the infelicitles of past generations. _ But I remark also. in regard to that body which you are to get in the resur- rection. it will-te an important body. These bodies are wasting away. Some- body has said that as soon as we be- gin to live we begin to die. Unless we keep putting the fuel into the furnace the furnace dies out. The blood vesseis are canals taking the breadstufts to all Darts of the system. We must be re- constructed hour by hour, day by day. Sickness and death are all the time try- ing to get their pry under the tenement or to push us off the embankment of the grave. But. blessed b.e God, in the resurrection we shall get a body im- mortal. No malaria in the air. no cough. no neuralgic 'twinge. no rheu- matic pang, no fluttering of the Iron, no shortness of breath. no ambulance, no dispensary. no hospital. no invalid's chair. no spectavles to Improve the dim vision, but health, immortal health'. o ye who have the aches and pains in- describable this morning. ye who are never well, ye who are lacerated with physical distress, let me tell you of the resurrected body, free from all disease. immortal! Immortal! toward the gate or look up toward the throne, it will be like the dawning ot a new morning on the bosom of everlast- ing day. o glorious resurrected body'. I go further and say in regard to that body which you are to get in the resurrection. it will be a vigorous body. We walk now eight or ten miles, and we are fatigued; we lift a few hundred pounds. and we are exhaust- ed; unarmed, we meet a. wild beast, and we must run or ttee or climb or dodge because we are incompetent to meet it; we toil eight or ten hours ener- ttetiealtr, and then we are weary. But in the resurrection we are to have a body that never gets tired. Is it not a glorious thought? Plenty of occupation in heaven. I suppose Broadway, New York, in the busiest season of the year at noonday is not so busy as heaven is all the time. Grand projects of mercy for other worlds. Victories to be rele- brated. The downfall ot despotism on earth to be anounced. Great expedi- tions on which God shall send forth his children. Plenty to do, but no fatigue. It you are seated under the. trees of life, it will not be to rest, but to talk over with some old comrade old times-the battles where you fought shoulder to shoulder. Sometimes in this world we feel we would like to have such a body as that. There is so much work to be done for Christ, there are so many tears to be wiped away, there are so many bur- dens to life, there is so much to be achieved tor Christ, we sometimes wish from the ttrat of January to the last ot December we could toil on without stopping to sleep or to take any re- creation or to rest or even to take food-that we could toil right on with- out stopping a moment in our work of commending Christ and heaven to all the people. But we all get tired. It is'a characteristic of the human body in this condition; we must get tired. Is it not a glorious thought that we are going to have a body that will never grow weary? O glorious resur- rection day! Gladly will I ttlntt aside this poor body of sin and tiirur it into the tomb it at the bidding I shall have a. body that never wearies. o blessed resurrection! Speak out. sweet flowers, beautiful ttowerat. While you tell of a risen Christ tell ot the righteous who shall rise. May God ttll you this morning with anticipation! I heard of a father and son who among others were shipwrecked at sea. The father and son climbed into the rigging. The father held on, but the son after awhile lost his hold on the rigging and was dashed down. The father supposed he had gone hopeless- ly under the wave. The next day the father was brought ashore from the rigging in an exhausted state and laid on a bed in a ftsherman's hut, and af- ter many hours had passed he came to consciousness and saw lying beside him on the same bed his boy. Oh, my friends, what a glorious thing it will be it we wake up at last to find our loved ones beside us. coming up from the same plot in the graveyard. com- ing up in the same morning light-the father and son alive forever, all the loved ones alive forever, never more to weep, never more to part, never more to die. Bam Smith, ot copettnrt, W. Va., Ct I. *s to a Greedy End. Point Pleasant, W. Va., April 19.- In a saloon at Copehtrrt, this county, yesterday somvunc read aloud from " newspaper about a man who had eaten two dozen hard boiled ng5. Sam Smith, “gm! 22 years. declared he could do that. A wager was made and Smith began. He finished the first half dozen m record time, then complained of feeling ill, but kept at his task until twenty-two eggs with salt and vinegar had boen swallowed. He was taken home and died in half an hour, despite' tho efforts of two doctors. May the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep. through the blood ot the everlasting covenant make you perfect in every good work, to do his will, and let the associations of this morning transport our thoughts to the grander assem- blage before the throne. The one hun- dred and forty and four thousand and the "great multitude that no man can number," some of our best friends among them, we after awhile to Join the multitude. Glorious anticipation! My soul anticipates the day, Would stretch her wings and soar away To aid the song, the palm to bear, And bow, the chief of sinners, there. A Scotch vlorgyman going to church. attended by his kirk-otticer, who formerly had been a. Roman Catholic, the pars-on, happening to stumble, tell to the ground. The headle, alarmed for the safety of the holy man, exclaimed, "Mother of Jesus. have mercy on his soul!" The person. more ohagrined at Don- aid thanlhurt by the tall, said. "You Highland sinner. what better was His mother than mine 'r" "Weel, sir," says Donald, "I dinna ken. may- be she was nae better, but wow man there's a great difference 'tweeeh their twa sons.†. Blest are the saints beloved of God; Washed are their robes in Jesus' blood Brighter than angels. lo, they shine. Their wonders splendid and sublime. EATS 22 E00S t THEN DIES. Donald’s Reply. Jeaus A {wears to .lu- A pmales John an l I9 ST, 1'otunumttsry.--19. The same day-- it is still the resurrection: day,Suu- uuy. the Lord's day. At evening-- The eye-nu; of the day had been many and important. but now, at the close of the day, Jesus appears to all the rlisripler. He would have appeared to them in the murning had tho) been umembh‘d then. Doors wore eltut--Atrt Irvopably bolted. Fortear --There is nothing to show that the Jews dosigucd to molest the tiirciIries, but lint-mum they had put Christ to (loath they had reason to tear that the) might be the nnxt victims- In the midst-He evidently "ntered miraculously. Io \erse L6 John re- ters to the tact that the duurn were tcltub " " way to loan: but' little doubt that ho inn-nth; to annoy the improssiun that Christ entered by his own power while Hwy worn Flint. SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERN A'I'IONAla LI‘LESUN NO. tr. APR“. 28, 1001. :0. Had H) said-Luke makes men- tion ot several other things that took place before he showed them hi» hands and ride. Mark says (chap. xvi. It) he "upbrahled them with their unbelief and hardness of heart." .lemls then proceeded tn nominee them that he was indeed a real person. Shewed unto them The wonnrm were probably all new rectly healed, but the scars rsuuaiu- ed. His hands and “is Hille~ Luke Rays ham-.13 and feet. This haves no doubt that Jesus was nailed to the cross and not tied nu as many were. When they s'aw--1 sight of Christ will madden the hurt of a digelple at any time. It was at this (inn thut Ho grun- to them another proof that H" wan tho itauw Jesus whom (hr-3: hm! known. Ho calla-d fur food tr,uko xxiv, II-tm :nri did out hufnrn lht-m. Aftm‘wards the apostles called at tention to what now occurred " a proof of thvir Lord'" resurtuttiott. Hath trent 1r.t-hs I was 'it-ttit to proclaim thu truth of tlm MAM High. and to convert sinnvrs to God: I send yuu for tho 'ery suno purpusv. clothed with authority and influvncI-d by the Spirit. Brt-nthwl on tluutt--itituntinst In thug that they were to bu tundo m-w mun; for in this not Ho widen“; alittdotl to the creation of man who†God broatht-(l into him llw hrs-nth ot “You and he bwume u living sunl." Receive ya the Holy Ghotrt--thtt of Hie fulness tlmlr minds and lteurtt,s were to hp filled. and thus they would be prepared to runs on the work "r- tor Ho had left them. Yo remit. Ptt'.--Hee Hm hm] \‘vrsiun, Company Matt. xvi, 19. One thing is certain. (ind only can lorgiw mm: to ueteluro anything“ "ltr:' would tro ttrutrphetttottre. But Christ Tttte pow†and authority to tltrs apotrtres in the establishing of His church that has not been transmittal to the t-hun-h. M. After eight daysione week from that tlme, on tlw next laml‘n day night. Again Hwy were nwt tor religious worship, am this tints 11101an was with them, probably rn~ com-aged to he prom'nt by what tluI other aposllon had told him. Tin-n came Jetntr,--Jtwum will always In- present with thaw who mom. in His name. L8. Thomas an-red-overwhelm- ed with tho fact of Chrlst's pros-9mm, he did not hold out an instant. My God-"I confess thy divine know- ledge and power and mush-Mo my- self before then as the great God." Thomas was the first who guva tho title of God to Jesus. 29. And yet. have bulipwd- Tho faith of Thomas would havq been more pleasing: tn Christ it he had believed at once. Let ma receive the testimony of those who have sewn him, rcmemherinqi that there art-po- culinr blaming-i in stow for than who have' not soon and ypt haw 1w- lieved. Thoughts-We uhcuhl m-vor abrirnt ourselves from tho chum-h of Christ. The Lord is always romly to give up abundant proof to establish our faith: but we Mionid rr-momiwr that his word is sufficient. It Thomas had remebermi and believed w'hat Jesus, at dilierent times. had told them. he would not hqu been so unhvlievinsr now. The Lord equips his semantic for their work by giv- ing them his "mum. his Spirit. hip: authority, his promises. Tho pres- ence of Jemts hrings pear:- to the soul, peace to the mind, [mace with God. peace with our neighbor. The hieseednens of than who believe without seeing “consists In the Ron- tetttrion ot the spiritual mind w ich diatoms spiritual things." PRACTICAL SURVEY. Notion Homo of the circumstances r-onnoctnci with this appearance of Chriqt to His npostios. 25. Except I shall tree-Thom." would not hollow- the temimxm) u! the ten apoMles. II, is must murm- sunablo and obstinate in his unbelld. I will not believe- Thomas is ti.) tut- tam that it cannot In H) that luv is determined not to be convluced: lw will not nocopl ordinary midcmw. 27. Reach hlthnr--Out. Lon] 1119MB him in his own lungungo, and this was It rdbukn to 'Photnurr, showing hlm that Jeams, though not [WI-SPIN, knew all the hard, unbrl‘mvlm: thlngu he had said. But believing-Ther" in ov1deneo tmrtieient. It will be well tor everyone to heed those words of Chrlst to Thomas; let us “have faith in God." 21. 'Imottr.ttr-Tltis was his Hohrmr mum) and Didymus his Greek [Hunt-1 both meant "a twin." Was not with them-Thur was an" ot tho principal causes of the untrelivt of this alumni». Tho manifestation of Divine power over matter. The doors, although shut. could not but out tho conquer- Ing Christ. "This does not at all weaken the evidence of His having a real human body after Hi0 resur- rection. Though the doors were shut Bo knew how to open them without any noise. and com in no that! they might not hear Him, as formerly Be had walked upon the wtster,ysnd yet had a. true body. Tho time and prace. It took Platte on the same day that Chrigt rose: from tho dead-the first day of the week, the day after the Jewi'h Sab- bath, at n private menting of ten of tho diaciplos and somn more of their frinndq with them. Luke xxlv. 33. "Tho disciples of Christ, even in dif- licult timns, must not forsake the assembling of themselves together." The improtrsiori made upon the dis- ciplen. Their faith was confirmed. an hf or summas. At rimrt “my thoaght they saw an ummritirm only. hat now they know it wnatlm Lord himm-lf. Thus many truo believers who. whiln tlie.' “xv-0 weak, feared their comrortte won- hut imaginary, nttvrward tind llmm. thruugh grime. real and trubstttutial. Anotlu r illnslruii cur-mind on 1hr )s itttr her" Mint u-u, c, wlro mmio lure mm; of the lam 1-leciioi; ('I‘HUZ' 1:! the [Cu-E u)! that it “'nul-l Fs.xtren uwen-th (-tlu-r an to an HIV the biggvsl mount than to n ln 12h! p'lr of. 70 mini -.I n-m'tl as higl, tir. Three Hundred and SQxly Thousand Feet High. PART OF THE WAR’S COST.‘ “-qu as high " l'Zw-rmsts. It in u fur the lenu Ir (\IJI tho IK'IHls pour". tlt" war " "Mun- Int :12 "ttttttt Int we " but souuilhtisrn l'i-xhaips Mr. RIMSâ€. “ill Witt' u, their ti “’3 Wll'm h“ main-e in Fug- luml. Of the mim- Witt',N in Urn-i howl-wr. whirl! :u'. b'i'tpc tumtiuc',c.l by thr, ('nlnnlul and Fur-vigil ('Hii-wr it is still H-ir-mvnlly uswrlml that “my mm wars for Hull». Let us mmshhr tm',', run at tit" risk of bring brand-d m. erottomistri, Little Futgiattders' “1- pm l'runp.ln-‘. Mr. Puuwist, trlr. kll"\|' ttlttrrst me much about unlinur; tra""' as Mr. 1lturulrrrla'm knows utrr,,ut trade in war material. lul'l In" "4rH utituvnta in Birmingham 1weut.s- m-un or t\\0‘llt.\-Ilghl Jrll.'"i :Iyzu that "trade nourishes luv»! with. out rorts." This is, ianJ. m: Mr. Bright Hall. a simple axiom of rum- mm-x-v: ,H't it has guru m-nuvth broken and "incur! I!) Mr. l‘h-nn» tterlain mvr rintut he rum-rod tltot'ol- (minl Offh-v. HP is always rmmulv ing und [wing to illustruln Ill artton that. ridii-ulmm filllul'y, "Trade FTilowrt the Flag." Mr. t'evil Rhmh-H tells In: thut the llriliVII Hug lath!- great ctrtuuttstwial nmwl. Mr. til-um borlain is his tllM'lplII. " silly dPlu- slum: about the 'ttingot"' 1:! rumm- tition have Cot hold on the manin the street. It the Income tna pay- er is making grout snoriflron with- out getting any rrturn $or his' mouey tum-pt in van-unity 1'ts:tsyMr. Chnmherlum and Mr. “huh-n are p. blame. (ieordle's lllnrss. A man meeting " friend whom he had not sewn tor Romp time, said: 'Inllo, Geordio, wlumr hue ya been this while back T' .. Man," says Gem“ die, "did ye Pty'. ken Iwaa laid doom wt' that trouble they ca' Influenza I'" "No, man, I didna hear (It: and what kin' a trouble ls it ?" "Weel, I can hardly explain." an," Geordie, "tmt alter ycr gettin' brtter ye feel gay lazy like: in tact. ye dinnn teel inclined tee dam anything." “Mun. man, due " tell mo, that? Weel, Tse been lashed that wav this last twenty yem. and couldnu nn l a mum tor it." Military Experience Stood a Student in Good Sit-ad. Major William M. Pogrnm. of Bul- limurv. tells a good story lliunirnt- lug how thr ncrw- developed in the Civil War rumbled u, yumâ€; South» nut-r to defy haters in a Northern Calls-go. _ -- mm “mm.r soldier was Joeeirh It. t'heriltiro. now Protestant l-Ipiumpul lilahop or North Carolitut. At tho clean at the war, in which lie aeruui with distinguished gallantry. he was but IT years old. Dividing m Nut-r the ministry. he went to Trinity (ka- icm- Hartford, Conn., taking with trim his well Worn gray ovetioat and his arm: revolver. While alone in his roam at the enl» lege one evening not long "her his arrival Mr. Cheshire received an un- usual number of unitary]. Um- by one students dropped in unlll nearly " more were in his mum. lie divined their purpose. but received them courteousâ€. Finally one. remarked: "I suppose you know what we have come tor?" At the same time, ho locked the door and put the key in his pocket. While this was going on Mr. Cheshire had barked quietly to his desk. Railing his revolver. he saw the command wltn military terse- uess: “Unlmsk the door, file out one by one!" The young men, seeing the stripli-nz student suddenly tram- formed into the trained soldier knew there Wail nothing to do but obey the man they had come In humiliate. Art the last one left Mr. Cheshire 'taid politely: "I hope you have. had n pleasant evening. gentle- man. Call "gain." â€No further: attempt was made to haze hirn.--Baltimore Sun. L' DID NOT HAZE BISHOP. I Th: ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ll mi: Arm-an mu ' in (-uxrrhlxdldx n: Ill In m iirstittt “mm the ('lmn- 'tlut't' llul grin-L rust TU miil'lmm~ H! IU' mm†un- t til' M u.“ nu an \N' +2 " .vrll [mull “Huh! M All“ New York ..'..' 1'itituatto... ....m. Milwaukee ... . St. Louis... ....' Toledo ... ... ... Dun-nit. rut... "rtroit, white Duluth. No. Noruteru... ... munch. ho. hard... ... v.. _.. Mitttu'tttrolis, N \urtlu-ru... .. Export rattle. chosen, per cm. N " to! _ dunwdium........... .. .. (a. w Export cowti....... . . 8gh Io Hutehorr'cattle macaw“... ti" to Butehers'cattte,ehouw... .. _.. .8tti In Bulvlnon‘caulc cood...... 33.3 In do medium. mecd “authors common. be "uib.extsort. h1-:I\'.\'. 1 Hunt. noon. lulu. he Feeders. phorz-kw-p .. Fault-w. tun-dim“ .. V delight... r._.r.e, Stacker». mom mu m... GIT-001m mod heitesrtc . Butcher-C hulk . . 'dfg! stock bull. per ctht, Mt can vows. “on. ..... Since-p. "Fr'" w-r rut. Sharp. tsuteltcrs', Loulsrur"aun4ed, do barmaid. " tio mrring. (:4 (than. per “and Howwlmzw. no: How. mlâ€. per l Sim: Hon rorottto Far-nor“ Mark“ Iirrit lu. *I1i'.i‘(-ril'h' (,7 pi-tut. 1m,- "rrrt murkvl ttctw t-Lug , again tctunll an! trude was mm. “no ur two [armnrs wnn- mm: “I: lo tite “in "mum u! .III,\.‘I'H hunt. Um- l al of “like wwul IO at "I! "lst his.“ at blond) um trom but. “a. wives hr-u- p $94.50 for Him clrnau. all: t". Hind) "thy which may be "sirtiom'r'd thrrcs war-k» Prttttertt prim; (mum‘s: No. 1 hard 79:. >32: 750. No, 3 hum 663. “All! hnrd 6tc, tough Nu. 3 Hurt! all in uloro at For: Wiitir, or Ctt roam [wind No, 3 mu sunr- prior {Us straight No. (lulu eHtteiiteatoi haw lm-u qui: week. Tlirarts is Mill mum» (IPI "ttetwt of turning nttontion to On- tario nuts. Tharwa is " Handy demand tor [and "tttle. Holders manila“ n littlv mono nnsFty to sell till-Ir Morn. as tho wnrm wontlter be up pant-hing. wlwn more in dang" n! tht, mt» lrwuming‘ allblk‘d by heat " Wo quote: Ontario thatâ€. No. 2 Width (Cry par bnvlwl. AIM-rut oate. 4t to 43v: Manhunt: trad-In. Mt to 400. in our Int-o. on track hora-Win "inâ€: Commorvial. April 13. llrndulreolu' on Trade. Wholoo-mln trado ttt Motttretti Hu- port wm'k has Int-on tnoriertttely art hr, and an tho wlmlc- llwrv lulu hoe" mm- inmrmc-mvnl. Artiw prvimrn “an arr brim! ntado tor the 'Ipt'll- ing ot nnslgation, null lurgv :umn» titims ot {Might nrv wailing to go forward. Tlure Imu- Iwon nmro mmmry huyers in Tun-mi. this wm-k. um! houm' "aleri in the wimlvsalo-lw partmentr' of Undo haw boon Iarg- r-r. Suit-u Ru fur this F'Httttolt in many rv'pnrtrnrmtat of luminous shinw a rumrirhrrttttle invrvnsv UVPl‘ proviouy years tor the sum:- timo. Thom has been a gum! dhuriimuvp demand tor \urmus “up!" minis at Hamilton tho mat week. Largo 'thitrutenuttort. tinmt to be much- to various part" ot the c-nuntry. 'l‘rnvnllorn urt- cond- ing forward sandman] order- tor the spring and summer. (‘uuntry ro- mitlnm-eo are very fair tor this unn- Mon. T anal inurtlw. titr"t',t bilioll upwards ml. it is Hurt-4y Rik-Ply o'mit in lrudo win luku mniguliun bs which may be 0x; thro" works. Prtttte Yotlou‘s: No. l harp, 750. No, 3 hum 663. tough No. " hnrzl 6tc, tough Nu. 3 nurtll-rn Grir, all in atom- at Fort William. slut or on routm [wind No. 3 ttard in Elu- rurm prlm- in; 'straight No. 3 hard. (“In "ttteiitvatoi hm: Mun quiir Mun week. Tlrrtts is "till mun" demand tor maul qrtttt, to supply which both 19n turio and Kortlwru “born: nuts are trim: maul. Tho doubts whirl: Imu- tttttt can! upon tho Krsrmittatintt umJlliFu of ttte latter lmw- lull tho Reginald Middleton's First Wlte'l Bonds Almost Broken. T An Ottawa Uertmte'tt days: The Ip- ptit-ution of Lilimi Munro Middleton, of Toronto, for amen-42 from tter hun- bund. “drum†Luna-lat Middleton. came holun- thv llitnrt‘o Committee 10-day. The :tpplivnnt WM the tlrtst od the 31mm: womb“ married by the bigamiat who in now serving a newâ€! years' term in Kluguton Penitentiary and who mum a great deal od no- toriety on avcount of his fruudult-nt scheme to construct a railway from Woodstock to Bra.utrurd. “to com- mittoe heard evidence and decid- ed to report to tho Senate tn tam ot granting the dixxrrcxt. F. R. lull. K. C., Cmmlty Crown Attorney of Oxford, roprrmmted Mrs. Middleton. The work of rauring an. battled). Kalle will begin on May 15to. We must-damn built around tho wreck wm he Iioirrhed, it is vspertrad, early ll tttq Hummer. wlmlwnln truth- at Winnipeg. The"! has been a fair movement trom job Imam' hands at London thlu weak. “Manna ttre (“~an to "(-er um orntiy In view of Ilw mmpmto for an Increasing trade. Advices trom tite Pgietfie 0mm SHOW that trad!) t'tt Is not 611911. lly Follow in): sto.' bud-.- Thero in no special team}: In In The Markets i 'rorouto “we mock “arm-n WILL GET DIVORCE. l, mm t dretiseri “mum: (at. s "1'ch trl [Assn-d li,pp, hunt tho ' an! ti" um 'tik. a. not owL I per "wt.. our 03"» .. mu- Markets Ittril l?- -W,t, Kit "ents ... pn-r an rt “l. .. our C w u-tin '. per owl. per ch. M-wln m th " ik-vly HI quI'-l. May / “pl. "ti Hard. Urulu Marketa ll mark 't, is an Mar» b init tto “I trrtvt ya, an I Wo minty j "tAtol at " ttIT to tm' [1:1 " (mall OT', -r-.- u To T-N or.lt-2. 0 7.: 744 074 T-ti ttTI T-s' 0 74 T-ti ----e " T.'t T t) tive ()7'78 07.234 " re gout-m: few rlumg In! is "ill dbl no “My. “hug. am (my quid Mau- unl May. $0 To :34 (I " I-t 0733 I {hi nt (nu-u with“ tt lit hard ll N, " tit f"