apectitc fails, it t. Vhen food is it lifts the burden. E N019 1901. yum rm: *AIJ'. -ONF.OF m m t. u Mar-r. 2t,i,"ttt,gt o man froru lawn“ on - 'rc- " Li. 36 of Villa. in i. m ‘hm. Wm Naomi-m m C "oltrtioflt'o I m u can m Thin in u timid“ W“ A.“ I Carpenter. P. 0. box Iâ€. W!“ Cave" not tried It. and for My. Its agreeable “It. In: ink-bi. th igtt0ow% "rsstdti tgrrrp m " ual tort i1'i'J','dlClt%%. .3“. new“ mr gunman". wind do q his: rwn 11y ior llim‘rinva 1"“! .3 mm. pness ot _ work heavy, More 'AiG0hkt'. F.XTENMto.N LADD†Loni. wronged! and hunched. I... ated "Undo-mum!" extend“ - st out for Fruit picking. palm and gym-ml “no: new for-or ratrtters trades. who bonds. " um: catrtltrqaet from Adda-no _ Ladder (1).. United. mm .irMeriun " if I you 10 ID “£1011“; '.1',5'2ie, at“)! .w "urto be [when y nae artit.tttare. Manager. Box an. at“ on In H iver Oil is the means d enjoyment of life to s: men women and MLPUMALI V-AMB-', " your»; man tot SHIN Bundlo. Man lst to Nov. Isl. I90! IS to (ttrs In". No mom (‘urou (invent II r. Iholml; - If nut mgst.i. Illuan lea HuarAuluedwm ___ - - 9‘1n- _ Ind " T new!†wovl OI- . .ymhor at“... .m the In what A r »gon I to "ef"'. " DROPSY 5.â€. â€431:1"??me an: tt ATMIIAJJA. WNE. Chemlul. [hum-r3. Bull" alsion of Cod food that makes ratomacb. IO no: mudh drowsy-“II. Italians . spa-Id†for y )wnrs, Quick "not. “nun-tun. Book of may“; M11110 "" ion! run ml: DWELLING AND mi upcmng; ur- on". 't to Treated Freq. fit-shit brings health. i, hard and it makes life {1i "rutrtrti. edge of the end is food. w- of food, and can't di- " CLONES "SI“ Train Sent on Tr†nun-m... - â€(um-rs I. mm Ruin-0d tumriby moi“: â€mus-sing. It 13. Buhlo. Inland (My hepn under with a red train that N'I‘" wreck mnny gave "tresaion of nu snqutrt'rq umv'mnca? Cunmk‘fo. My (“all to thrr people " I“ " “CRIN; so 'I' ll littttt' togtvo mr or ['0 - "eekly inc-. r di-tunce. " In ruture, " " Railway Ir , NI' TRUST A cl for rotinNp t u, (‘LERK’ .: "ta't",2t M"d . (' 1','f,',d'n"i','Mrl my mlclrm on may. Monet Jana out. ~l' " VEVI'G culars with. lnrm-l and uh! to Bul- For n. lld.. South Hinton White under Budding. rota, A WM rope": In an. dil- eoune Dr. Tamil" â€and. the 9mm " the world'l Manner nad put. bo- fore us thtrrortrauta or some of " put disciple: um monenti. AGE John iii. 81: "Be “In. Cometh from a." In ubove alt." 'rt.- .:'.oet conspicuous chute“: of history steps out upon the plettorm. The inner which. diemonded with tight, pointed down to him from the Bethlehem sky was only e retlncntion at the ttnger of prophecy, the an." of “melon. the finger ot events--) Ive thttrera pointing in one direction. Christ is the overtopping figure ot ell time. He in the vox hum-me. in all music, the gracefuleet line in all Iculp. tore. the moat exquisite mingling ot lightl and eludes in ell painting, the acme of all climaxes, the dome of all cathedraled grandeur end the per-ora- tion of all splendid lenmge. The Greek alphabet II mule up of " letters. and when Christ competed Himself to the ttrat letter and the last letter, the alpha and the omen. He appropriated to Himself all the splen- dor-I that you can spell out with those two letters and all the letters between them. "I am the alpha and the ome- ga, the beginning and the end, the ttrttt md the last." or, if you prefer the words of the text, “above all." It menus after you have piled up ell Alpine and Himallyan altitudes, the glory of Christ would hove to spread its Winn and delcend a thou- und league. to touch those sum- mits. Pellon. . high mountoin of Themiy; Qua, a high mountain, and Olympus, a. high mountain. but my- thology tells us when the giants waned against the gods they piled up these three mountains tind from the top of them proposed to scale the henvena. but the height we: not (rent enough, and there was a. complete failure. And after all the gituttr- Iuiah and Paul. prophetic and upon- totte giants". cherubim and seraphim And archangel. celestial qitutt----have foiled to climb to the top of Christ's glory they might well all unite in the words of the text and say. "He that cometh from above is above all." First. Christ must be above all else in our preaching. There are so many books on homlletlcs scattered through the world that all laymen as well an all clergymen have made up their minds what sermons ought to be. That sermon is most effectual which most pointedly puts forth Cttrint as the pardon of all sin and the correction of all evil, individual. social. political. tttV tlonal. There is no reason why we should ring the endless changes on a few phrases. There are those who think that it an exhortation or a dis- course have frequent mention of Justi- Ie-tlon. aattctitteation, covenant of works and covenant of grace that therefore it must be profoundly evan- gelical. while they are suspicious of a discourse which presents the same truth but under different phraseology. Now, I say there is nothing in all the opulent realm of Anglo-Saxonism or all the word treasures that we inher- ited from the Latin and the Greek and the [ado-European but we have a right to marshal it in religious discus- sion. Christ sets the example. His illustrations were from the grass. the ttower. the splttle. the salve, the barn- yard fowl, the crystals of salt. as well as from the seas and the stars. and we do not propose in our Sunday- school teaching and in our pulpit ad- dress to be put on the limits. . I know that there is A great deal said in our day against words. u though they were nothing. They may he misused. but they have an Im- perial power. They are the bridge be- tween soul and soul. between Almighty God and the human race. What did God write upon the tables of stone? Words. What did.(thrlst utter on Mount Olivet? Words. Out of what did (arist strike the spark for the 11- lumination of the universe? Out of words. "Let there be light." and light was. or course thought is the cargo. and words are only the ship. but how fast would your cargo get on without the ship? What you need, my “lends. in all your work, in your Sunday ochool class. in your retormatory in- stitutions. and what we all need is to enlarge our vocabulary when we come to speak about God and Christ and heaven. We ride a few old words to death when there is such inimitable resource. Shakeopeare employed 15.000 different words tor dramatic purposes. Milton employed 8,000 different words for poetic purposes, Rufus Choete em- ployed over 11.000 different words for legal purposes. but the most of no have less than 1.000 words that we can manage, in. than 500. and that makes us so stupid. When we come to set f of Christ, we Are going undercut phraseology wm it. and tt it ttatt never , that direction before all t When we come to set forth the love of Christ, we are going to mine the undercut phraseoiogy wherever we and it. and if it ha never been used in that direction before all the more shall we use it. When we come to speak of the glory of Christ, the conqueror, we are going to draw our simile- from triumphs] an-h and otatorio and every- thing grand and et'upendous. The French navy have eighteen ttars by which they give sign“. But those eighteen me they can put into 66.000 different combinations. And I have to tell you that these standards ot the erase mey be lifted into combinations htilrtite and varieties everrtnatinq. And let me say to young men who are ef- Mr awhile going to preach Jesus Christ, you will have the ingest lib- ortr, and unlimited reeource. You only have to present Christ in your own way. Jonathan Edwards preached Christ in the severest argument ever penned, and John Bunyan preached Christ in the sublimest allegory ever composed] Edward Payeon, sick and exhausted. Jeaned up against the side of the pui- pit and wept out his discourse. while George Whitefield, with the manner end the voice and the start of an ac- tor. overwhelmed his auditory. It Mould have been a different thing if ' - . .__ '- _...u- yn. 668&kd "c.†u... -___ _ George Whitefield. with the manner end the voice and the start of an ac- tor, overwhelmed his auditory. It {Would have been a different thing it wonathan Edwards had tried to write Ind dream about the Pilgrim's Pro- trels to the celestial city or John Bun- rr'" had attempted an essay on the he!) with grunt†than the light. fresher than tounteinn, deeper than the nu are there gavel themes. Song he: no melody. Bowers, hove no oweetneee. meet ll] he: no color competed with these glorious themes. Theee nerve“. of - spring up quicker then we can sickle them. Kindling pulpitl with their Are end producing revolution: with their power, lighting up dying beds with their glory, they ere the oweeteot thought tor the poet. end they ere the most thrilling illustre- tion for the oretor. end they offer the most intense scene tor the ertilt. end they ere to the emheeeedor ot the dry ell enthusieern. Complete pardon tor the direst guilt. Sweetest comfort for gheltiiest egony. Brightest hope tor grimmest death. Grandest resur- rection for darkneet sepulcher. Oh, whet e gospel to preach! Christ over ell in it. His birth, hie suffering. hie miracles. his parables, his unset. his teen. his blood, his atonement, his intereeuionmuhet glorious themes! Do we exercise faith? Christ is its object. Do we have love? It (eaten: on Jesus. Have we a. fondness for the church? It is because Christ died tor It. Heie we a hope of heaven? It is because Jesus went ahead the herald and the forerunner. The royal robe ot Demetrius was so costly, so beautiful. that after he had put " ott no one ever dared put it on, but this robe of Christ. richer than that, the poorest and the warmest end the worst may wear. "Where Iln abounded grace may much more thound.†"Oh, my sins, my sins," said Martin Luther to Staupltz. "my sins. my sins!" Tht fact is that the brawny German student had found a Latin Bible that had made him quake. and when he found how through Chrilt he was pardoned and saved he wrote to a friend saying: "Come over and join us, great and awful sinners saved by the grace of God. You seem to be only a Blender sinner. and you don't much extol the mercy of God, but we who have .been sueh very awful sinners praise his grace the more now that we have been redeemed." Can it be that you are so desperately egotistical that you feel yourself tn first rate spiritual trim and that from the root of the hair to the tip or the toe you are near- leso and immaculate? What you need is 3 looking glass, and here it in in the Bible. Poor and wretched and miser- able and blind and naked from the crown of the head to the sole of the foot. fun of wounds and putrefylng sores. No health in us. And then take the fact that Christ gathered up Ill the notes ngainsz us and paid them Ind then offered us the receipt. And how much we need him in our sorrows! We are independent of cir- cumetnnces if we. have his grace. Why. he made Paul sing in the dungeon, and under that grace St. John from deno- late Pumas heard the blast ot the 'rpocsl.rptic trumpets. After ell other candles have been snuffed out this in the light that gets brighter and brigh- ter unto the perfect day. and after un- der the hard hoot: of calamity all the pools of worldly enjoyment hove been trampled into deep mire at the foot of the eternal rock the Christian. from cups of granite. lily-rimmed and vine- eovered, puts out the thlret of his loul. Again, I remark that Chrllt In above on in dying allevfationtr. I have not any sympathy with the morbidity abroad about our demise. The Em- peror of Constantinople arranged that on the day of his coronation the stone- maeon should come and consult with him about his tombstone that after awhile he would need. And there are men who are monomanlecal on the subject of departure from this life by death. and the more they think of it the less prepared are they to go. This is an unmannness not worthy of you. not worthy at me. God grant that 'when that hour come: you may be at home. You want the hand of your kindred in your hand. You want your children to surround you. You want the light on your pil- low from eyes that have long refteet- ed your love. You want the room still. You do not want any curious strangers standing around watching you. You want your kindred from afar to hear your last prayer. I think that this is the wish of all of us. But is that all? Can earthly friends hold us when the billows of death come up to the girdle? Can human voice charm open heaven's gate? Can human hands pilot us through the narrows of death into heaven‘s harbor? Can an earthly friendship shield us front the arrows of death and in the hour when satan shall practice upon us his internal archery? No, no'. Alas. poor soul. it that is all! Better die in the wilder- ness. far from tree shadow and tar from fountain, alone. vulture' cir- cling through the air waiting tor our body, unknown to men. and to hove no burial, it only Christ would say through the solitudes: "I will never leave thee. I will never forsake thee." From that pillow of stone at ladder would soar heavenward. angels coming and going, and across the Bolt- Gordon Hall, far from home, dying in the door of a heathen temple, said, "Glory to thee. 0 God!" What did dying Wilberforce say to his wife? "Come and sit beside me and let us talk of heaven. I never knew what happiness was until I found Christ." What did dying Hannah More Buy? "To go to heaven, think what that is: To tro to Christ. who died that i might live! on. glorious grove! Oh. what a glorious thing it is to die! Oh. the love of Christ. the love ot Christ'." What did Mr. Toplady, the great hymnmaker, say in his last hour? "Who can measure the depth of the third heaven? Oh, the sunshine that fills my soul! I shall soon be gone. for surely no one can live here after such glories as God has manifested to my soul." What did the dying Janeway say? " can as easily die as close my eyes or turn my head in sleep. Before a few hours have passed I shall stand on Mount Zion with the one hundred ‘end forty and tour thousand and win: the just men made perfect, and b we mu Iscribe riches and honor end glory end majesty and dominion unto God and the Lamb." Ir. Taytoai. :93- tude and the barrenness would come the sweet notes ot heavenly min.. strelsy. run-don Hall. far from home, dying demned to burn " the ante. on his wny thither broke any from the qttardamen and went bounding nod leaping and Jumping toward the are. glad to so to Jean: and to die for him. Sir Cherie. Hare in his last moment ind such rapturous vision that he cried, "Upward, upward, up- ward'." And so great wu the peace at one of Christ'l disciples that he put his linger- upon the pulse in his wrist and counted it and obeerved its hnlting beat: until his life had ended here to begin in haven. But made: than that was the teltimony of the worn-out minimum, when in the Mn- martine dungeon he cried: " 1m now ready to be ottered, and the time ot my departure in st hand. I have fought the good "ht, I have thtiahed my course, I have kept the Mitts. Hence- forth there is laid up for me e crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will give me in that day, And not to me only, but to all them chat love Hitt :ppetrlnz!" Do you not see that Christ is shove R41 the dying ulevlulons? Toward the last hour of our oarttur l residence we are speeding. When I see _ the spring blossoms scattered. I my. "Another sesson gone forever." When I close the Bible on Subbeth night, I say. "Another Sabbath deported: W'hen I bury a friend, I say, “Another earthly attraction gone forever." What nimble feet the years have'. The roe. bucks and the lightnings run not I0 fast. From decade to decade, from sky to sky. they go at s bound. There is n place for us, whether mulled or not, where you and I will sleep the last sleep. and the men are now living who will with solemn tread. carry us to our resting place. Brighter than a ban- queting hall through which the tight feet at the dancers go up and down to the sound of trumpeters will be the sepulcher through whose rifts the holy light of heaven streameth. God Will wntch you. He will send his angels to guard your slumbering ground until, at Christ's behest, they shall roll away the stone. So also Christ is above all in heav- en. The Bible distinctly says that Christ is the chief theme ot the celes- ‘tial ascription, all the thrones facing l his throne, all the palms waved before his face, all the crowns down at his _ feet. Cherubim to cherublm. seraphlm to seraphim. redeemed spirit to re- deemed spirit shall recite the Ssvior's earthly sacrifice. Stand on some high hill ot heaven, and in all the radiant sweep the most glorious object will 'be Jesus. Myriad: gazing on the scars ot his suffering. in silence tirst, afterwards breaking forth into acclamation. The martyrs, all the purer for the tttune through which they passed, will any. "This is Jesus. tor whom we died." The apos- tles, all the happier tor the shipwreck and the scourglng through which they went, will lay. “This is the Jesus whom we preached at Corinth “I in Cnppadocia and It Antioch and at Jerusalem.†Little children cm inl white will any: "This is the Jews who i took us in his arms and blelsed us. and when the storms of the world were too cold and loud brought us into thin beautiful place." The multitudes of the bereft will say: "This is the Jesus who comforted us when our heart broke." Many who had wandered clear " from God and plunged into vegabondism, but were saved by grace. will any: “This is Jesus who pardoned us. We were lost on the mountains, and he brought us home. We were guilty, and he made no white as mow. Mercy boundless. grace unharalieled." And then, after each one he. recited ‘hll peculier deliveraneee and peculiar imercies. recited them " by solo, oil the voices will come together in a greet chorus which shall make the arched re-echo with the eternal reverbera- tion of giadness and peace and tri- umph. Edward I was so anxious to go to the Holy Land that when he was about to expire he bequeathed $160,000 to have his heart after his decease taken and deposited in the Holy Land. and his request was complied with. But there are hundreds to-day whose hearts are already in the holy land of heaven. Where your "centres are. there are your hearts also. John Bunyan, of whom I spoke at the opening of the discourse. caught a glimpse of that plaoe, and in " quaint way he said: "And I heard in my dream, and, lo, the bells of the city run; again for joy. and as they opened the gates to let in the men I looked in after them, and, lo, the city shone like the sun, and there were streets of gold. and men walked on them, herps in their hands to sing praises with all. and am. that they shut up the cues, with when l hsd seen I wished my- eel! among them EANAHIAN BIHL INSANE Lost Position in New York OveraNovel. TOOK TO CHRISTIAN SCIENCE. New York report was Jennie Lewis novertst, Private Secretary to Bishop Huntington, is a raving maniac In Bellevue We ward tonight. The girl is a. native of Toronto (7). but lived at Ottawa with Emily F. Ire- land. The two came here to become trained nurses and Miss Ireland was graduated. Miss Lewis accepted the tsecrettrryirhip. She wrote a novel on Toronto and Ottawa scenes. scenery and people. Bishop Huntington read it and advised her not to publish it. On account of this novel Miss Jennie lost her position recently. and was studying Christian Science. This afternoon, while walking in Central Park with Miss Ireland, discussing the novel, Miss Lewis suddenly went Insane and attacked Miss Ireland, calling her "Satan." When a police- man arrived the girl tore him like a. wildcat. Other policemen arrived, and, after a third tight, the girl was tak. en in an ambulance to the hospital. Miss Lewis is _yonng end pretty.1 must: â€a. .u ... “v-7.†__ . - Ottawa, April t',0.--h private de- spatch received here this evening from New York states that Miss Jen- nie Lewis, of Pembroke, Ont., has been taken to the Bellevue Asylum tor the Insane in a demented condition. Miss Lewis is well connected. Formerly she was employed as typewriter in the law office of W. R. White, K. c., of Pembroke. and left there three years up) foe New York, to become a train. ed use. She is a. native of Rlchmond. nuns» about 25 when from Ottawa. I" SUNDAY SCHOOL Commeettarr--t6. Then - Matthew does not notice my ot the important event. that hue taken piece be- tween Chriot and His dilclplel linee the morning of the remrrectlon. They did not lo immediately into Galilee. but waited in Jen-wen: at least one week, when Chriot appeared to them nan-In. on Sunday night, April 10th. While they were waiting in Galilee tor the appointed time ot the meet-1 ing, Jens purprised seven of them at _ the an ot Galilee (John xxi. 1-23). and fully restored Peter to his former position among the disciples. Soon after that interview occurs the apt» cial meeting of to-dny'e iesoon. This was his eighth appearance. The oievtut--Whue there i. no mention here that any besides the eleven were present. yet it is the general opinion that the whole body of the disciples had come together, and that this wu‘the time when ('hriet tur- peared to the 500 brethren referred to by Paul in 1. (hr. xv. 6. Went away--'No eleven went iron: Jerusa- lem to Galilee. "A long Journey to co tor one night of Christ, but it was worth while." Into Galilee-Why did Christ have this meeting in Galilee l' “This having been the principal scene of Uhrlet’e ministry. tho greatest part ot His followers lived there, and for this reason H-e chose to make His most solemn and pubiic uppenrnm‘e in that eountry."-Btsmxm. Had ap- _ pointed them-Jesus, had evidently named the mountain. [ITIBRATIOXAL hEESUl Mo. VI. MAY 12, 1901. When they saw Him-There was something mysterious and supernat- ural in the nurnitearttttion of the glo- ritiod body. The more devoted and loving disciples were probably the first to recogniw their Lord.-Hom. Com. They worshipped Him-“They Wave Divine honor to Him. which was signified by some outward expres- sions of adoration." Those. who see Jesus with an eye of faith are al- ways true worshippers of Him. They are rendy to bow humbly at His toet and give Him the love that in due Him. But sumo doubted-Cor. tainly none of the eleven after what had taken place at previous inter- views at Jerusalem; but if the GOO were now present. we "my well be- lieve this of some of them. The re- aurrection came in accordance with u. long line of prophecies. And Jesus came to them (R. Y.r- Thio drawing near was manifestly a special approach unto those who were 1iottbtinit--Lunge. All authority tit. Vo-Authority and power dill-2r: tor many have authority to do what they have no power to do. while others have power but no authority. "Our Lord‘s authority implies power, also." Christ was about to com- miasion His apostles, and sent them out with authority as ambassadors to the nations, and He first shows them by what authority He unto. Hath been given (R. Y.r--"He did not assume it, or usurp it. but it was given Him; He Wu. legally entitled to it and iuvedted in it by " grant trom Him who is the Fountain of all power. 19. Go ye thorerore--Thit, ttomtnie- sion is given primarily to the apoc- Ues, who were to carry on and es- tablish the work Christ had inaugur- ated. “What must have been the feel- ings which such " commission awak- ened! We conquer the wnrld tor thee, Lord, who have scarce conquer- ed our own misgivings-we. fisher- men of Galilee, with no learning. no means. no 'tnrluenve Y".--". Brown. And make Dummies IR. TO-They were not to go and subdue. or pro- nounce judgments walnut the na- tiona, but to make disciples by preaching the gospel of Christ-- a gospel of peace and love. Henceforth they were to be fishers of men. If we are ministers of Christ we will win men to the truth and thus lend them to obtain salvation. Of all the nations IR. v.)--ephis Word of Christ breaks down the middle wall of par- tition whtch had so long exclmled the Gentiles from the siaibte church." Baptizing them-This wan to he a sign that they had left their hen- then religions. and had become true converts to Christianity. into the nnme.--Tlfo means that converts are pledged by baptism to a faith which has for its object the being desig- nated by that name. and which brings them into union with him. Holy Ghoat--Here we have the trin- ity clearly set forth. Tmera is One God. with one undivided name and nature. who exists as three Divine Persons. under the personal diltinc- tion of Father. Son. and Holy Spirit. 'do.treacliintr the.a--It is the duty of the npnstlrss and ministers of Christ to instruct those who be- come disciples or learners. To ob- m'rve, "te.--What Christ has com- manded must be taught. and obnerv od. We ate to "obtrervo"--oa' at. tention and obey “all Uu'rtpe"-not merely then? things which suit ma twat, but all the moral duties, with- out exception. that Christ has cum- mnmjed. I am with you alway--Lit- wally. I nm with you every day.-Dr. Clarke. In the person of the Holy Spirit. Cltrit" would never be ntr sent from them a single day. This should be a source of no little en- couragement to all true ministers ot the gospel. tNachimtar.--Chriat will always tw, present with tho-w who meet in Hits name. We should never doubt God in anyway; Hu, promise are surn- We should never hesimte to go, when God my»: go. for Ile will " ways he wlth us. and will never allow up to be defeated. We are lg- norant' and need instruction: tho gospel is a great teacher. See Titus U. 11-12. - -- "N PRAUI‘ICAL SURVEY. TIrs, occasion. This was now the eighth nppenracno of Christ after Hie resurrection. His second appear- ance was to the woman. returning from the sepulchre. and He said to them, "Go, tell thy brethren that they go into Galilee; there shall they see Me." According to appoint.- ment He was there, and the eleven disciples had the privilege of hear- in: His words once more, and of worshipping Him. The meeting- place was upon a mountain-tt favor- ite resort with Jesus. They had shown their eotttidenee in His word by coming to the appointh place. expecting to find their Lord there. Tiny knew that He was the same being who had been crucified, and they were eager to know, all that He night he pleased to dmlure to the. concerning himelf. them. The Great Commuaioer.-Matt. as: w.» aka. the new kingdom and their my! WWW - m field of labor. The lipid was large. Europe. Ads and Airiv-n were then known. and all this territory wu inhabited by those who needed the game-I. Jeans 'rpswbriod no land by name. but “in! terms broad enougttt to include nations then ex- isting and all than should, afterward “he. “is preaching m to pan beyond mountain barriers. was to over-leap riwre and sons. and must be carried through all ciimes. Into (in frown arctic region and the heated me or earth. The nature ot the work. It wu to be anreasiwe. Joann uldl "Go." They were not imply to want for the peo- ple to come to them Inquiring for the gospel mom-ago: they mun be, atlr themaoh'm. '1‘th were to be tniwiotttsrietr and traveling preach- oro and teachers. Gxrl In His provi- dence nrrangrd matter. no that m early Parkman: turn forced to "go." Tho persecution that an)†anon " ter Pentecost soatterod them abroad. and they went proachlng the groggy-l. Their “1er must he. im- partial. Tetwh all nationa“ and "Preach the KoApe, to every crea- ture," are din-Minna whlch should arouse Christ's Church to home and foreign missionary effort. The We ot power. Jenn! now pays, "All power In given unto Me in heaven and in earth." Upon this He bases His command. tor Bo tol- low» with the word "thererore." “Go ye thvn-furn" ind‘watw that they were the human agentc. while the power was of God. He nssurva them of Iii» personal pro-once dawn to the and of time. MISS SMITH SETS (l7,lillll, Aged Wooer Who Jilted Her Must Pay. SAID HIS HEALTH PREVENTED New York tletnratcli: in the Essex Circuit Court in Nowark, N. J., yvs- lerday morning, " jury, which had been out tritttw Tuesday artttttoott. gave a. ver0irt tor $7,500 in favor ot Milli Ida E, Smith, in her suit for $50 000 tinmugma tor breach ot pru- mise against Charles W. Compton. m: “an1 rc'tirod underlain". William B. Guild and Roler " Me- Cnrter. 00!â€an tor Mr. Compton. announced that they would "ppol the (axe to the Supreme Court. ('imndler w. Biker, vottntwl fur Miss Smith. Hunks the vordict ls not large Puourh, and may appeal to have it wt aside». In the trml u: llw may, which occu- pied tour days Mr. Compton admin: " the ngrecmont to marry Miss Smith. but declared that on the mm- name0 for the m-rt-mme, June 13th ot lam year, his phyrieal vond1tiott was such that to marry would have may“! him to risk his life. In his vhttrgo to ttto jury. Judge Swnyze derlared that tor Mr. comm ton's breach of prnmhw to marry. Mitrtt Smith was entitle" to damages. That there would hum been " hazard to his! “to it Mr. Compton mm mur- ried, dtwlared the Judge, wua unfor- tunate, but no ground tor defetttw. After tite verd'u-t was unnoum-vd yesterday it was tttrid that on the fin-rt ballot one juryman vote-d to give Mitre Smith $30,000. tour to give her $25,000, tits for $15,000. and that one thought $1.000 was enough. Than a debuts1 ttegan which and“! nt mid- high! with eleven men agreed on 815.000 and the other man still clinging: to hire vote tor #1000. An " compromise the twelter finally agreed on $7.500 early .tolerdu.s morning. Huh-ago despatch-Cattle receipts 3.500. gpnerall: alt-may. Good to prime steers. 84.95 and 85.90; pom to medium, $3.85 and 34.90; stock» urn and feeders. 82.75 and "M: cows. 013.70 and 34.50; IwHPru. 82.75 and 34.80: runner“. 821.10 and 82.65; bulls. 82.75 and 34.40; calves. 84.00 and 85.10: Texas ted steers. 84.25 and 85.40: Texru' grass tttperm 33.50 und 84.00: Texan hulls. .277: and .335. T London crtth--OrferinM at the wool auction Salem to-day llu-ll'rml ELEM) tralet A good mln‘tiol was put forward and "ompetition WHO! spirlted. The hone trade operated freely and buying ot the continent showed some improvement. A low superior grimy marinas were sold at full ratm America “spurt-J some t ll" torin-marktht HIondonnlrl at Ill-11d. Sonic Miner anew white Cape at Gt,irl Hop! nn' Natal Hold ut an adminâ€- of G iwr cent. A good selection of mourn“ sum readily, line at lull rules. low gunk»; at easier prices. A quantity ot Victoria was “llhdrnwn. hills being too low. Croarshretis wore in tair supply, chivily low unit medium Krasier'. The" Hold well at lull mites. Cape of Goord H 'W' and Natal orrrsr- inggr were large, an l they sold well to Um homo trade nnd the continent at llrm prices. Sever-ill lots were brought in. Following ar" the miles in detail : "'Qx'éml gout]? Wales. 3.300 ml...» mourn). " ld to Ins Gd: groan), 6 ct-ri to tid. _ Bouth iurtrnUn, 100 mm __ Round. 8 1-2d to le 2 1-2d ', greasy. " HM to 8 1-2d. P. _ vietoria,2,rootLiedr--scoured, " ld to " GO: â€may. Gd tq_11 1724. " “mid to 101-2d. l [LI New Zealand. 15.800 ba1ee-teoured, i nu 6:1 to in 41-2.d: money. lid to 9d. In ' Cape ot Good Hip? and Natal, 1.400 , xt, bales» Scour-ed. 71-2d to Is 611:;m groovy. c, I-dd to T 3-46. in Mnnitoba Wheat Marketa. iTI Th" local market continues remark I [y ably quiet and dull in the race of l ‘1 the increased activity and higher l ttt marks-ts outside. Buyers are scare» I I“ and indifferent. Prices are aboveiln export value and holders are lirm in 1“" their ideal and not disposed to tnkv ', It prices that would admit ot export _ lit sales being made. Very little wheat IN changes hands from day to day and ID" there will be little im'reue In dear l m ings until lake navigation has fairly ' I" Opened. Prices at the close ot yes in terdus's business were: No. 1 hard ter 79 340. No. P. hard, 76c: No. 3 hard 671-2c; No. 8 northern, 62 1.2c : l PC, tough No 8 hard, 621.2c, tough No. I m 3 northern, 621-2c, all in store at l, br. Fort William, spot or en route. For 1 Cr; May delivery prirtes are 1.2e high" I W than above. No. 3 hard rloaqd today l p! at 69r Fort William and No. 1 hard 1 In at 810. an advance of l l-2c overim yesterday's clone. Trading in a lit- 1 ' tie more aetive.-Winttipegt (‘ommer- er, West Australia, 1,5500 ta_-Gretuiy, Cttiratto (:nMIe Market. hon-ion Wool Sules. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Leading When Marlon. Following are tho alt-ring quota lion:- " inunrunl when. centro- tau-dam : V ' Gianna) ... ... w......----- “173 Nor York ... ... ... ---- 0801-: “"111un ... ...... 07510.1 ---. tit. IM ... ... ..... ---- OT' 34 Niedo ... ... ... ...... 075 3-8 015 3-8 Detroit, rod ... ... 0161-8 0161-?! Detroit “mm ... . 0701-8 â€"â€"- Duluth. No. l Northern Duluth, No lint-Mum. No. t Northern ... ...... ---- 073 " Tom-Io Fax-morl' Market. int-ob on the “not market here to- day and the deltveriee d produce warr small. One luv! M White when "old to higher at T2 “in pet but“; ten loads ot an; sold unchanged at " to 815 per ton. and one lend of eta-aw sold GOt' lower at " per ton. Prieee at other lit-mince were notuimslly cloudy and unchunged. “heat. while. T:..' 1-30 ' do, red. Tac; or.. gum». 69 1-20; (In... 'qsrin. 710 ' hark). 46" : r.rr, GI 1-L'e ', buckwhou. ET The Markets M 1429: onâ€. 34 1-20; peas. tttic: my, " to “5:01.111, .9; butter. 150 to MM. Toronto hive Stock Home“. Errttrt conic. choice. nor an. It 3.3 y). "iGinaiaii.V.C.r, Pinon cows....... ... Butchen‘otule pmked PuthwN' mule. chemo. .. orurestt" goat. manna. Inked ._._..F_ Bu, um common. not on. Null-t. export. heavy. per out. Buli-trt,titru. nor out... Fonda-abomkoep .... .s.ser Footing, medium ...rv.....' -itiitutit. V . .,.r.-, Stoogeâ€. Mung-nun. ol-oolor- and honors. . . Butcher mumâ€. V. _ .. [ism suck bull. not cm. I choochwh... .. .. Shpeq. e".""' per cwt. .. tio.-..........,..... Shove; bum-cut “an . . . . [Am .mln-fed. per cw! do hrwurd. per cwt ‘. do Bp mr, munch 'FF Calres.portutad,... .__.. '3ogtu.estiotee, per cwt.. .. 'dts,t."t2y par cm... .. “on. in per cv....., "on. an per can §owu.percwlu..... rut Bail-Io Market Import --Tuere was var) Mule buar Fniriy tuttive dvmuud at unclmngna Ink-nu. Culveu: [air demand; cttoitte to extra were quotable at " to $5.25; (and to cttoimt, $1.75 to " sheep and Langur--orrtsruMrs alum! I!) numb; there Win.- a [nit dumalul for chute». to nun 'sheep and lambs. but there was a lttrtte portion uf toe. otrerittpt lt-It over at the Nous. choice to oEtra clipped lam!- were quotable ‘5 lo $3.10; gum! an choice. $4.75 to .5; I-nmmnn to Ink. $8.50 to 84.75: wool lambs. $3.27- to $3.33. alt-op. choice to extra, “.25 to $1.50; good to rhoiee. M to $4.25. 1iugrs--Opertt_t 'slow, with tteasy 1iugs--Opertt_t aluw. with hmny lung. ttuottshle at $5.90 to $535; mixul. $5.90 to $5.95; \‘arkt-ra. 8.1.85 to $5.95: may. $5.75 to 35.30. rough, 35.30 to 33.40; Ma‘s. $4.23. to “.110. The nth-rings were prtrttr weil clennud up and the Mun-P we: Alumina "Idea. Skins and Tulmw. "Heb-Tho twceiirts' are fair. there la in mmbrate demand, with no Acct mutation ot Mocks “rm. and prices are steady. Laval chalet-i quote tor arm-n No. I towgf mic mnl ugh-err Tc and Ic low! [or No. 2. Cured Md" are rather almuly at " tor -‘()WI' and 81-40 for atom-s“. Fleece-1‘19 markvl it! practically at n utundtstlll. and trrituaa are numb-- ally nun-Imam! at It! to nr. tor 1900 qrttWoet clip. _ 51mm]: an in hur ulnppiy. and the market In etc-mix at 100(- to 31 tor the hem. "skim: are "aorart on no to 6Ge. "rajiAilikLrherr, its' a fair an.“ and tlw Innrlu-t is “may at M. tor No. l and Tc tor No. I'.. Picton. Ont... May 1.--At our than» Board today 1:93 white and 20 0d- ored Worc- ottvred: M3119.“ bid. F c, "iv; :83 white cold. Tallow. The market in Heady. Lo. cal denierr are orrerintt b. to 5 tie and are asking 51-! to 51-342 Toronto Wool Marketa. 'hiwro In no mun-mum reported In Home wooleaut the market to: abut tur dull ar not. Pulled wnnls are Tery quiet. __ _ F Pulled “'(nlsrd‘terp little truitt I. ham: done In pullod wool. and pricm urn umlmngwd at 10 to 170 tor "op"" ant 19 to 200 for extra“ Meal. TSte mum is prm-tivully uwr and then» arr tew nah-m. Prices are u.- ulmmt. Jobbm's lu-rl- quote- Malte- at $7.35 to 88.50. rei claw-r [H 87.50 to 38.25, uni (Imttlly "t 82.t.'S to 3.1.15. Trade In wholumlo- vim-lea at Mont. real has [run of [air opluttte to: Um mwworn. Ito-ports Irons trade cen- trmo ot th' country are encouraging and thr outlook is ""tt,i.tered [snot Male. There In tt good demand hr mono-y and rate on- firm. This bam hem a fairly good wvek tor wholesale trade at Toronto. n good all." county buyers has ins: b to In the on}. [u-miuancm are only [air at the moment. but should impro‘w '"re. luminous at handm- (“Minna at tur volume- for th. tM'atsoA. The orderl numlng to johlu-n urn generally tor lulr qunntnlm ol "ortinR “onâ€. There is still rnmpluint of trude be intt so“ at th" must. Wr,o', trt1 r! at Vunumwr any that Irwin-mt in not active and that mum-y is mum In Rowland Lrndn- is :luprmu-l and ttw labor situation in not considered an encouraging. At Hamilton there l- "ill " good dtmsund tor WINNING line-r: to sort. rx-tuil veto-k4. whlch hue been broken into and which tree up pected m be nanny dru wn on for tho coming mmmc'r. Travellers are unend- Inn; in many ordotw. Shimnnn" con- tinw. Lurtre. There is a good demnld [or money Winnipeg whims Hum that 'mr- nmt hummus in "HKan of a parting nature. (‘ountry Hunt-chants who bought cautiously when "availa- firat wont out with samples nrt- now taking "hm-all quantities of cool: [or prerent roquiremvms. and are: Show Ink their mnfidc-nm- In the, (“are by placing lthrul “with: [or the full. Values contlnm- firm. 'Phe nos-ding on eratiomr haw horn going (Orv-I'd "rntGtreetrs' on Trade t “hone Market». 0 TB 3-8 0 " 8-8 07! 3-8 to. ' b, to Ito