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Durham Review (1897), 20 Jun 1901, p. 3

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od, and more than Ips you digest what. B'ou can bear. ALEâ€"ONXE OF® THE a Penizsuls, ab to two rail "_(.'.'.hi:hoi: in fruss. lowers Used to P the Attar. SAOC GAM®PLA ANO TAY o9 | 30 weekly, working n l%hcatlon. Toledo E& hio. ow cmubdnramnct BUSY, AND wWaAXNT Write. in rour own . tea importers, Lonâ€" NT OF THE ROSES» "MIDGET"BICYCLE s any bar; no ,‘g‘- <rattle or lose off; car ; carries 100 lbs.; 500 a by mail, ten cents. 3, London, Ont. sold in one Treated Free. o made dropey and Its cations a speeialty for yours. Quick reltef. forst cases. Book of ND WOEX to CRES FOR SALEâ€" @. _ near Conneaut n, Butler, Pa. irls Wanted O. box 108, y sickness, no matvge, bcgin with a little rulsion of codâ€"liverp C w nt w t uiT t , $1.00; all druggists. , NO 25 1901, . ROPSY »Hi s liable £30 Payne Co.. London, old in One Day tiing WM. PAYNE IMâ€" equal: differs from )R SALE, FORTYâ€" aild ings Syrup should al eothing. Itsootha [t cures DROPS. Walton, Scarbore ‘an â€" silver, b'rii_g us )ol-xrA»ddr.g you seoll it. retarm end you the wateb ail. Address the Catharines, Ont ve i and set silver er. for selling r Poli<h, someâ€" ay, ('laan.-gnu pristor s lsolated % 1 ent: The Toâ€" should â€" have pickle vat * of the leadâ€" mtinent have the object of rourt is sitâ€" iven a trial : half, includâ€" [our hours to affairs they Nate the fuâ€" clifi(e to turm Medical Colâ€" rc woull be ie object in ‘ Interests of it of science in or kidney penslve Ul'd-r_ _to the abuse n propertlies, ~ make a cerâ€" nocessary. In e perflume isz ering for use, ence is suffi. whole pint of known odor. infrnqnently ‘r of aoâ€"called ly gets nothâ€" ive ol w'th t vertal "”t ipression that of the most vistence. et, is lit;'r.l]’ nore than itg gold is priced but the same | cost the purâ€" iggist n itton, P N‘S SONS, ment for k nd, aswely 8. proper lifte in the > aleep in }'a};leu Al ails to cure, m H::h box. apparently nsi ]l-rnt‘on. well groundâ€" rOn i ve wed to c quantity credible. In iputed that ses are re. ince of the by Phyâ€" inlereg Own P all oih;p enlal the + 400 000. hat attar cted 'rO- ordar D horsge clima the ty large eresting conâ€" Ttoronte,. of t‘. roduce aper eause of the victory which they saw depicted between the top of your foreâ€" hbead and the round of your chin. If you are the right kind of a man, the right kind of a woman, something has happened to you that ought to fill your soul with courage and your face with glorious sunrise. Your sins all forâ€" given, that makes you all right with the past; an eternal heaven promised <o your soul, that makes you all right with the future. Again, is your one talent that of wit or humor? Use it for God. Much of the world‘s wit is damaging. Much of satire has « sting in it. Much of ‘esricature is malevolent Much of &’nrttort is vitriolic. In order to < things how many will sacâ€" In one of the towns of New York state an inhabitant said to a friend of mine: "I do not believe as that man does, but I cannot despise a reâ€" ligion that makes a man look as happy as he seems to be." If we have a rough visage, we cannot nelp that God so made u«; if accident or battle have so defaced us, that is no fault of ours; if strabismus has hurt our eyes, no one will satirise us; if our features were not suited for Lavatet‘s physiognomy, no one could blame us for that. The jaw may too much proâ€" ject or retreat, the forehead may not be Shakesperean, but a cheerful spirit in that man will triumph over all deâ€" fects and pour around all who meet him a supernal influence. If that cheerful look be your omly talent, use 4t for the world‘s consolation. There will be a hundred people whom you will meet this week to whom you will have no right to speak. It would be an impertinence. You have never been introduced to them, they were never introduced to you. You have ro right to stop them on their way, as they have no right to stop you on your way. But you have a right to look at them. Then look with a faith in God and a holy pyrpose and a manâ€" liness and a good cheer that will keep them thinking all that day and wonâ€" dering who you are and what is the Is it a cheerful look? Carry that look wherever you go. It must come from a cheerful heart. It is not that inane smile which we sometimes see which is an jrritation. In â€" other words, it must be a light within us #o bright that it illumines eye, cheek, nostril and mouth. Let ten men who are accustomed to walking a certain street every day resolve upon a cheerful countenance as a reâ€" eult of a cheerful heart, and the ‘inâ€" Suence of such a facial irradiation would be felt not aonly in that stroet tbut throughout the town. Cheerfulâ€" ness is catching. But a cheerful look is exceptional. The most (diffieult thing in the world is to make an accurate estiâ€" mate ofâ€" ourselves. Our friends value us too Migh, our . enemies too low. To find out what we are worth morâ€" ally and mentally is almost imposâ€" sible. We <are apt to measure ourâ€" selves by those around us, but this is not fair, as they may be very brilâ€" Mant, or very dull, very good or very bad. ‘Indeed there are no human scales that can tell our exact moral and mental weight, nor is there a etandand by which we can measure our exact intellectual height, so the hardest thing to do is to calculate our real stature or heft. But it will be no . evigence of egotism in any of us If we say that we have at least one talent. ‘What is it, and finding what it is, what use shall we make of it? The most of the people, findâ€" ing that they have only one talent, do as the man spoken of in the parâ€" able, they nide it. But if all ~of the geople who have one talent brought it out for use before this century is half past @nd correspondents begin to write at the head of their (lotters 1950 the earth .would be one of the outskirts of heaven. I ask you again What is your one talent? we say, ‘"What an awful disaster." When one of them devotes all his abilâ€" ity to useful purposes, we celebrate it, we enlarge upon it, we speak of it as something for gratitude to God. MeanwhiUe we have no time at all to consider what people are doing with their one talent, not realising that ten people of one talent are quite as importast as one man with ten talâ€" ents. In the one case the advantage ©r opportunity is concentrated in a single personality, while in another it is divided among ten individuals. Now, what we want to do in this sermon is to waken people of only one talent to appreciation of their duty. Only a few people have five talents or ten talents, while millions have one. ‘My short text is like a galâ€" vanic shock. ‘"To another one." Washington report ‘s4ysâ€" This wWiscourse by Dr. Talmage for â€" given to depreciate themselves »who have an idea ithat their bes tempts ameount to little ‘or not Text, Matthew xxy., 15; "To an Expel first from ‘this parable of the talents the word "usury." It ought to have been translated "interest." Usury is finding a man in <a tight place and compelling him to pay an unreasonable sum to get out. "Interâ€" est" is a rightsous payment for the use of momey. . Wihen the capitalist of this parable went off from home, he gave to his stewards certain sums of money, wishmg to have them profitâ€" ably invested. _ Change also your idea as to the valze of one talenut. You remember the capitalist gave to one of his menm Â¥or business purposes five talents, to another two, to another one. What a small amount to this last, you think, and how could he be expected to do anything with only one talent? I have to tell you that one talent was about $7,200, so that when my text says, ‘"To another one," it implies that those who have the least have much. We bother ourselves a great deal about those who are highly gifted or have large financial resource or exaltâ€" ed official position or wide reaching epportunity. We are anxious that their wealth, their eloquence, their wit, be employed on the right side. One of them makes a mistake and port :saysâ€" ‘This is a â€" Talmage for those 15: *"To another atâ€" Is your talent that of persuasion? Make good use of it We all have it to some extent, yet none of us thinks of it as a talent. But it is the mightiest of talents. Do you difference about what the excepâ€" tional people are doing. Have all the people with the one talent enâ€" listed for God and righteousness, and let ail those with five or ten talents migrate to the north star or the moon, and this world would get on splendidly. The world would be mightily improved if it could slough off about 5,000 geniuses, for there are more than that on our planet. Then the man or woman of one talâ€" ent would take possession of the world and rule it in a common sense and Christian way. There would be less to amaze and startle, but more to give equipoise to church and state and world. ‘"To another one." world. What use is there in all that? No use at all. I have not so much interest in the one man out of & million as I have in the million. Get the great masses of the world right and it does not make much difference about what the excepâ€" There is a man in business life whose one talent is honesty. He has not the genius or the force to orâ€" ganise a company or plan what is called a "corner in wheat" or a "corâ€" ner in stocks" or "a corner‘" in anyâ€" thing. He goes to business at a reaâ€" sonable hour and returns when it is time to lock up. He never gave a check for $20,000 in all his life, but he is known on the street and in the church and in many honorable circles as an honest man. His word is as good as his bond. He has for 30 years been referred to as a clean, upâ€" right, industrious, consistent Chrisâ€" tian man. _ Ask him how many talâ€" ents ‘he has, and he will not claim even one. â€" He cannot make a speech, he cannot buy a market, he cannot afford an outshining equipage, but what an example he is to the young, wihat a@n honor to his household, what a pillar to the Church of God, what &a specimen of truth and inâ€" tegrity and all roundness of characâ€" ter! Is there any comparison in useâ€" fulness between that man with the one talent of honesty and the dashâ€" ing operaters of the money market, who startle the world first with a "boom" and then with a ‘"slump?" I tell you that the one man with the one talent will live a happier life and die a more peaceful death and go to a better place than his brilliant but reckless contemporary. _ ‘‘To another one." The chieft work of the people with many talents is to excite wonderâ€" ment and to startle and electrify the world. What use is there in all that? No use at all. I have not so I cannot see how heaven could make them any lovelier than they are Or were. But there are exceptions. There is a daughter in that family whose father is impatient and <the mother ‘ querulous. The passage of many years ‘does not always improve the disposiâ€" tion, and there are a great many disâ€" agreeable old folks. Some of them forâ€" get that they were ever young themâ€" selves, and they become untidy in their habits and wonder how, when their asthma or rheumatism is so bad, other people can laugh or sing and go on as they do. The daughter in that family bears all the peevishness and unreasonable behavior of senility withâ€" out answering back or making any kind of complaint, Ift you should ask her what her five talents are or her one talent is, she would answer that she has no talemt at all. Greatly misâ€" taken is she. Her one talent is to forbear and treat the childishness of the old as well as she treats the childâ€" ishness of the young. She is no muâ€". sician, and besides there may not be‘ a plano in the house. She cannot skilâ€" fully swing a croquet maillet or golf stick. Indeed, she seems shut up to see what she can do with a ladle and a broom and a brush and other houseâ€" hold implements. She is the personiâ€" fication of patience, and her reward will be as long as heaven. Indeed, muach of her reward may be given on earth. She is in a rough college, from which she may after awhile graduate into brightest domesticity. She is a heroine, thoush at present she may receive nothing but scolding and depreciaâ€" tion. HMer one talent of patience under trial will do more good than many morocco covered sermons on patience preached toâ€"day from«the tasseled cushion of the pulplt. *‘To another one." Or is your talent an opportunity to set a good example?" One person doâ€" ing right under adverse circumstances will accomplish more than many treatâ€" Ises about what is right. ‘The census has never ‘been taken of lovely old folks. Most of us, if we have not such a one in our own house, now, have in our memeory such & saint. We went to those old people with all our trouâ€" bles. They were perpetual â€"evangelists, by their soothing words, ‘by their hopeâ€" fulness of spirit, an inexpressible help. The question is always being asked, Why do not more people go to church, prayer meeting and other religious meetings? I will tell you. ‘We of the pulpit and the pew are so dull they cannot stand it. But when we ask why people do not go to church werask a misleading «question. like the sarcasm of Christ when %he told the selfâ€"righteous Pharisees that they were so good they needed no help. **‘The whole need not a physician, but they that are sick," «or when in mirthâ€" ful hyperbole he arraigns the bwpoâ€" critical teacbers of his day who were se particular about littte things and careless about big things, saying "Ye blind guides that strain t a goit and swallow a came!," and ‘t®e Bible is all ablaze with epigram, words surprisâ€" ingly put and phraseolagy that must have made the asidiences of Paul and Christ nudge each other and exchange glances and smile and ‘then appropriâ€" ate the tremendous truths of the gosâ€" pel. ‘There are some you can laugh down easier thar you can preach down. men in ail the world and in all the churches realigse that if wit is beâ€" stowed it is given them for wseful, for improving, for healthful purposes. I rifice the feelings of onthers! The sword they carry is keexr, and it is emâ€" ployed to thrust and lacerate. But few 5 Jnlece AS Owing to an outbreak of emalipox in the convent at Laprairle the inâ€" stitute has been auarantined. So difficult was the task of locating the dilsease in the village that a detecâ€" tive had to be employed by the bhealth department. . _ _ ; The Chairman and Secretary of the Separate School Board of Winnipeg waited on the Public School Board and presented a petition stating that the separate schools were now supâ€" plied with certificated teachers, and that the schools were willing to subâ€" mit to Provincial inspection if the board would take them over. The peâ€" tition was referred to a committee to confer with a committee from the applicants. ali the divisions comes in sight. It is a hundred to one, a thousand to one, ten thousand to one, larger than the other divisions. It is made up of men who never did anything but support their famflies and give whatever of their limited means they could spare for the relief of poverty and sickness and the salvation of the world, mothers who took good care of children by example and precept, starting them on the road to heaven, millions of Sabbath school teachers ‘who sacrificed an afternoon‘s siesta for the listening class of young imâ€" mortals, women who declined the makâ€" ing of homes for themselves that they might take care of father and mother in the weakness of old age, ministers of the gospel who on niggardly stiâ€" pend preached in the backwoods meeting houses, souls who for long years did nothing but suffer, yet sufâ€" fered with so much cheerful patience that it became a helpful lesson to all who neard of it; those who served God faithfully all their lives and whose name never but once avpeared in print and that time in the three lines of the death column which some survivor paid for, sailors who perished in the storm while trying to get the life line out to the drowning, persecuted and tried souls who endured without complainti malignity and abuse, those who had only ordinary equipment for body and ordinary endowment of intellect, yet devoted all they had to holy purposes and spiritual achievement. As I see this, the largest of all the divisions, from all lands and from all ages, pass in review before the King on the great white throne I am reminded of the wonderful parable of the talents and more especially of my tex‘, "To anothâ€" er one." After the resurrection day and all heaven is made up, resurrected bodies joined to ransomed souls, and the gates which were so long open are shut there may be some day when all the redeemed may pass in review, beâ€" fore the great white throne. If so, I think the hosts passing before the King will move in different divisions. With the first division will pass the mighty ones of earth who were as good and useful as they were great. Their genius never spoiled them. They were as humble as ihey were gifted or opulent. They were great on earth, and now they are great in heaven. Their surpassing and magniâ€" ficent talents were all used for the world‘s ‘betterment. As they pass in review before the King on the great white throne to higher and higher rewards it makes me think of the parable of the talents, "To another one." I stand and watch the other divisions as they go by, division after division, until the largest of of your tongue. . Monosyllables are ‘mightier than polysyllables, and that word "come" is the mightiest of + monosyHables. Shakespeare says of one of his characters, "She epeaks poniards, and every word stabs." We may say of others, they speak words which are of balim and music, are light and life. Master one of those words, project one of those words, prove the full plenitude and power ~of one of those words. to that wrecked character, you can at least feel sorry for the misfortune or the bereavement or the suffering. Sympathy! If you have not the means to do anything else, go and sit down and cry with them. That is the way Christ did when he went out to the desolated home in Bethany and the sisters told their sad story. He cried with them. Oh, cultivate that one talent of sympathy! the power of which cannot be esâ€" timated, and it reaches so far up ‘«nd so far down, and that is the word "come." It has drawn more people away from the wrong and toâ€" ward the right than any word I now *think of. ‘It has at times crowded all the twelve gates of heaven with fresh ~@arrivals. It will yet rob the path of Geath of the last pedestrians. It will yet chime so loudly and gladly that "all the toiling bells of sorrow will ~be drowned with the music. It is piled up ‘in the Bible‘s climax and ‘peroration, "And the spirit and the bride say come, and let him that heareth say come, and let him that is athirst come." Have it or the point of «your pen, have it on the tip If you cannot do anything etse, go around and feel sorry for somebody. When somebody asked, "What is the secret of William ‘Wilberforce‘s powâ€" er?" theâ€"answer was, "His power of sympathy." And there are 10,000,000 people who have the same qualificaâ€" tion if they only knew it. Sympathy! If you cannot restore the child to that bereft parent or the fortune to that bankrupt financier or health to that confirmed invalid or an honorable man knotw that this one talent Will fetch the world back to God? Do you know it is the mmightiest talknt of the high ‘heavers? Do you krow that it is The one tatent chiefly employed bÂ¥y al the ange!s of God wken they d@câ€" soend to our worldâ€"the talent ‘of Persuasion? Do you realise that The Tough lumber lifted into a cross on Tthe ‘hinl ‘back of Jerusalem wiks in persuasion as well as sacrifice? ‘That is the omly, absolutely the only, perâ€" suasion that will ever induce the human race to stop its march toâ€" ward ‘the ~city o# destruction and wheel mround and start for the city of light. Now ‘may the K&ord this moment show each one of ws that to Aa greater O0r less extent we ‘have that one ‘talent of persuasion ‘and impel us ‘to the right sise of it. Among the 114,000 word@s of (Noah Webster‘s vocabulary and the th@ousands "of words since then added to our English vocabuâ€" lawy there is one outmastering word Winnipeg Separate Schools. reAiidt 28e CU 1R PCXE CCII & & ) & 25. Shall not be shutâ€"The doors of the Chrietian church on earth are ever open to receive einners who are ready to for@ake their wickedness and turn to Chriet ; and the gates of the new Jerumalem are never shut, and those that are sanctified will ever have an abundant entrance. 24. The nationeâ€"There are inhabâ€" itants in heaven from all the nations of the earth. Which are #arvedâ€"No one will ever enter heaven who wae not eaved on earth. In the light â€"Now we gee through a glass darkly, but then face to face. The Kingeâ€" Some of the kings of the earth will be e&aved. _ Bring their glory, ete.â€" "Everything de@rab‘e, excellent and glorious, is perpetuated and perfectâ€" ed in heaven." 1‘x_ * * 22. Amlleawâ€"John is carried away by the Spirit into a great and high mountain, v. 10. where he ie shown the holy Jerusalem. Compare Ezek. xl. 2. This@ city was a symbol of the church in glory. It: was a solid cube, eymbolizing completeness and perfecâ€" tion. 23. No need of the eunâ€"For the pregence of God and the Lamb make one eternal day. Heaven is the inâ€" heritance of the eaints in light. The whole city ecemed to appear to John "like a luminvue object, sending out rays on every side." â€"a full salvation. ‘The water from a fountain springs up and flows over : and so salvation in the soul gushes out in the life through our words and actions, and flows over on those around us. Freelyâ€"It is for all who thirst ; it is "without money and without price." Isa. Iv. 1, John iv. 14. 7. He that overcomethâ€""He that euccessfully resists the temptations of the world, the fleeh, and the devil, anl continues steadfast in the belief and practice of the truth to the end." Inherit all thingsâ€""Here, he had no inheritance ; there, he whall inherit the kingdom of heaven and have clsthpy nossible degree of blegsedness." 6. He saidâ€"Christ is the speaker. It is doneâ€"‘‘"‘The great work of man‘s redemption is accomplished. The righteous are gathered into the new Jerusalem, and the wicked cast into the lake of fire. The apostle is carâ€" ried forward in vision to the end of all things, and looks back upon the prophecles of this book as already accomplished." Beginning ......... endâ€" Christ here shows that He is the cause and end oi all things. Founâ€" tain, etc.â€"Representing the religion of the Bible. ‘The supply is exhaustâ€" less. Here is an unfailing fullness of love,' jf)y, p>ace, and spiritual strength have passed away to return no more. 5. Upon the throneâ€"S»e chapter iv. 2. All things newâ€"As the creation of the world, at the beginning, was the work of God alone ; so is this new creation.â€"Clarke. Writeâ€""The aposâ€" tle seems to have ceased writing, being overcome with ecstasy and the voice of Him that spake." True and faithfulâ€"This includes all that had been revealed to John. more deathâ€"This is ample proof that this whole description belongs to eternity and not to time.â€"Benson. But death cannot be destroyed by there being simply no farther death ; in ordér to its destruction there must be a resurrection. Passed away â€"All the mo«urn{ul scenes which were «on earth so familiar to their eyes 4. Wipe away all tearsâ€"" All the effects of former trouble shall be done away ; they have been often before in tears, y reason of sin, of alfliction, of the calamities of the church ; but now all tears shall be wiped away ; no signs, nor rememâ€" brance of former sorrows shall reâ€" main, any further than to make their present happiness the greater." No 3. Tabornacle ...... with menâ€"This is an expression showing God‘s ‘"intimâ€" ate and perpetual communion" with men. It is a figure from the conâ€" ception of Jehcvaoh as a resident in the old Jewish â€" tabernacle â€"Hom. Con. Dwell with themâ€"God in the most especial manrner dwells with His followers, diffusiog His light and life every where. â€"Clarke. 2. New Jerusalemâ€"*" Au ideal citp, presented under {igures that repreâ€" sent perfectionâ€"the perfection of purity, beauty and joy." ‘This new Jerusalem is a symbol of the chunrch of God in its new and perfect state, "prepared as a bride adorned for her husband," beautified with the perfecâ€" tion of wisdom and holiness.â€"Henry. 1. A new heaven, etc.â€"Compare Isa. Ixy,. 17â€"19, H. Peter ii. 18. "These words exprese the greatness and the glorious character oi the change that takes place in both the aboge and the state of the redeemed. Happy are they that shall have a place in the new Jerusalem. ‘They will underâ€" stand, as we cannot now, the meanpâ€" ing of this chapter." Â¥k9 SUNDAY SCHOOL A_New Keaven and a New Karth.â€"Rev,. 21 14, 221. Commentary.â€"" This vision stands in the prophecy after the last atâ€" tempt of the enemies of religion had b:ln defeated ; after the bglwd :ll aml great, had appeared before ‘s Judgmentâ€"seat and had been judged according to their works; a{fter all the wicked had been consigned to everlasting punishment, and all who were not fourd written in the book ?irr life bad been cast into the lake of * INTERNATAONXAL LESSUN NO. Xit. JUNE 23, 1901. . In no wise enter, etc.â€"Heaven Monkey (in the jungle, to her dissolute son)â€"Why don‘t you be a man ? Monkey (her son)â€"I will be in about ten generations a._t“LL »_:F..:?’l y o ;‘1’3’ g uiss Aucighls 5o ies‘ Tam ONTARIO ARC f TORONTO Thousands of Veterans. So far applications have been reâ€" ceived by the Crown Lands Departâ€" ment from about 3,000 veterans of 1866, who claim to be entitled to the land grant offered. Veterans of the South Africas war have applied to the number of 291. The forms for filling in are now being sent out as fast as poss‘ble, in the order in which the applications were recelred. Weigh Your Newspapers. Mr. Ross, assistant postmaster, Toronto, writes : The public would seem to be under the impression that one cont will pay the postage on a newspaper without reference to weight. Attention is directed to the fact that the postag> rates on newsâ€" papers mailed in Canada for places in the United Btates is one cent per each four ounces or fraction thereof, and it would be well, therefore, to see that all papers sent to that country are properly prepaid. How to Preserve Quality of One of ’ Our Great Exports. __ Ottawa, June 14.â€"The official reâ€" _feree on butter and cheese at Monâ€" treal, who is an officer of the Deâ€" partment of _ Agriculture, reports that a large proportion of the seeâ€" ond grade cheese which has been reâ€" ceived at Montreal this season beâ€" longs to the class usually known as "weak" and "open." In view of this fact, Mr. J. A. Ruddick, chief of the dairy division, Department of Agriâ€" .‘culturf. hns_ Issued the following leatâ€" as it might be unless heavy pressure has been gradually aind persistentâ€" 1y applied. This defect may be overâ€" come by allowing more acid to deveâ€" lop in the curd before the salting, that is to say, more time should be allowed from the drawing off the whey until the eurd is salted and put to press. The less acid there is in the curd when the whey is drawn the longer will be the time required to mature it properiy. /n vont niatieintitcai® d ic ditoliivcaed ~Thacs . s d let, which is now being distributed : "Finest" cheese must have a cloge. solid body. The presence of numerâ€" ous irregular holes makes what is known as ‘"open" _ cheese. "Weakâ€" bodied " cheese is of the same charâ€" acter, with some excess of molsture. Openness in cheese is usually the reâ€" sult of an insufficient development of acidity in the curd before salting and putting to press. An open, loose body is sometimes caused by lack of sufficient pressing. Some curds will not make close, solid cheese under any amount of pressure, yet, on the mh'er hand, no cheese is ever as close ledge as to how the Olristians he left were prospering. The outlook _ was gloomy indeed ; it â€" seemed but to mock his prayers. God showed thim not a regenerated Roman world, but a "new earth," with a holy city for its metropolis. J. E. C. a holy place, and only holy people :n ent:r. Whl;lle the g‘ntene:req;l- s open they are guarded. e thce who stand at the gates not m‘;dem those who have a rights to enter, but they keep away all intruders. . Nothing abominable shall be allowed to enter there. Which are writtenâ€"Those enter whose names are written in the Lamb‘s book of life; who are renewed, justified, sanctified and thus fitted to be glorified. PRACTICAL SURVEY. A new earth. Why? Because this one is under the curse of sin. Its most natural products are thorns and thistles, which are emblematical of sin and unworthiness. What will beâ€" come of this one? It shall melt with Bt. Johno had often prayed for the regeneration of the Roman world (earth), and had hoped to see it eubâ€" dued to Christ. But years before he wrote this lesson he had seen all the other apostles killed. He was banished to Patmos. He had no knowâ€" come of this one? It shall melt with fervent heat and be cast into the moulds of ‘God‘s eternal purpose again and be remodelled. In its creation the heavenly state was the ultiâ€" matum, bdut man by sin thwarted the design of God for the, time being. But God has not abandoned his purâ€" pose in this respect. _ Changes in the new earth. In its reconstruction there will be no more gea. It now occupies about threeâ€" fourths of the earth‘s surface, which will be needed fo> the millions of reâ€" deemed saints. 'l"‘\hr»re wi‘l be no night. Its location. ‘There is a great deal of conjoecture as to the present locaâ€" tion of heaven, but it seems plain that it will finally be where this earth is. ‘The New Jerusalem, the great capital and metropolis of God‘s kingdom, wherein is His throne, shall come down from heaven, and the tabernacle of God shall be with men. God shall have the uninterrupted rule : Satan, the "god of this world," having been cast into hell. The blessing of its subjects. "I will give unto him that is athirst of the fountain of the water of life freely." Because of the curse of sin the Nlow of this water has been more or less hindered ; the understanding limited and the mind clogged by the infirmâ€" ities of the flesh. For whom is this blessedness? It is for him that overcometh. There shall in no wise enter into it anyâ€" thing that defileth or worketh abâ€" omination, or maketh a lie. It is difâ€" is doing more to delfile, and thus ficult to think of any one thing that abominate and render deceitful the hearts and lives of men, than the traffic in strong drink. SECOND GRADE CHEESE. The Anglican Synod of Toronte toâ€"day â€" refugsed to unqualifMedly approve the Lord‘s Day Alliance‘s work, and in appointing a commitâ€" teeto work with it to consgult the Eynod before exercising avy powâ€" Pulied Woolsâ€"The demand from the home mills is slow and will likely continue so for some time, as they will be getting considerable lots from the growers and country dealers. We quote 16 to 17¢ for supers and 18 to 20¢ for extras. w Manitoba Wheat Markets. The local imarket â€" for Manitoba wheat, says the Winnipeg Commerâ€" clal, is extremely dull. With the adâ€" vance in outside markets prices woere higher in the beginning of the week, but with the decline since prices are around what they wore a week ago. ‘This week | brought a much needed rain, and there is now a more confiâ€" dent feeling with regard to the wheat crop. The rain has been general, and lagted until Thursday night. In the more westerly parts the rain «tarted on Saturday. Reports from all parts indicate that the grain districts are pretty thoroughly souked. On Thursâ€" day the wouther turned quite cold and frost was general during the night, but it is not thought that any damage has bwes done to the wheat. Reports from most parts state that there were about three to five deâ€" grees during the night. . The small fraits and â€" tender â€" vegetables have probably been injured to some exâ€" tent. Snow fell quite freely on Thureâ€" day. The woather is milder now, but not warm and is considored very farâ€" orable.â€"Winnipeg Commercial, June 8. + Cash. July. (‘»hlca‘o We ohun â€" Soi s Say © se $0 69 Now Vart "Las 6 TA Sows, per cwt Foronto Wool Markets. ‘The offerings are small and the wet weather has injured the condiâ€" tion of a good deal of the wool comâ€" ing Torward now. It is damp and discolored, swhich detracts from its value. Where is no inquiry for exâ€" port and the market is generally unâ€" changed. Pulled wool is dull. . Fleeceâ€"There is no change in the market. Local dealers are getting in some small lots, but the moveâ€" ment go far has been light. We quote for washed 13%¢ and {®r unwashed Lenging Wheat Markets. Foliow are the closing quotaâ€" ;I:u at important wheat centres toâ€" y : R New York ... .. .. â€"â€" 0 74 38â€"4 Milwaukee ... ... .. $0 74 0 69 1â€"2 Bt. Louis ... .. ... ... 070 1â€"4 0 67 1â€"8 ‘Toledo ... ... ... ... .. 072 1â€"2 071 5â€"8 Detroit, red ... ... ... 0O 74 0 T2 3â€"4 Detroit, white ... ... 074 â€" «m Duluth No. 1 rorth. 072 1â€"8 0 69 1â€"4 Duluth No. 1 hard 075 1â€"8 â€"â€" Minneapolis No. 1 mOortherf ... .. ... ~â€"«« 0 6T 3â€"4 Toronto Farmers‘ Market. Oateâ€"Were firmer ; 20.) bushele sold 1 to 1 1â€"2¢ highar at 37 to 87 1â€"2¢. Hayâ€"12 loada sold $1 lower at $11 to $13 per ton. Strawâ€"Two loade sold $1 lower at $8 to $0 per ton. offâ€"colors and heifere Milch cows, each... ... Sheep, ewes per cwt. Cl IRRDNS L sc 20000000 do Spring, each... Calves, per head.... .. Hogs, choice, per owt Hogs, corn fed........ Bogt.l.lfht. por owtb.. Hogs, fat, per owi... Molight.,... .11« Stockers, 100 to 640 lbs, Lambs, grain fed, ger _do Spring, each .. C M ced e e T ET CPRROEDLNL:>scaxxery » <>++++ .A N6 Cxport OWE â€"......:...>..>..~« MWP Butchers cattle picked ........ 4 60 Butchers‘ catte, chorce.. ...... 4 19 Butchers cattle fair............ 375 dogonu.,... 3.:5 ons c en nov ib iss dn s onas l Bulfl.l.oxpon. heary, per ewt.. 3?5 Bulle, export. light, per owt.... 3 50 Feoders,. shortâ€"keep ...... ...... 4 35 Toronto live Stock Markets, * Export cattle, choice, par owt. $5 00 bo 4 5 40 Butterâ€"Market is firmer ; the best offerings of grass butter sell at 16 to 17¢, an i the eupply is rather emall. Poultryâ€"Quiet, with a light deâ€" manl. Pricee are unchanged. Potatoesâ€"â€"The searcity of supplies ham hardened the market, and prices .u.re_fi.rm at 45 to 55e per bag. Two Napanee, June 12.â€"At the Cheese Board toâ€"day 1,486 boxes chees» were boarded, 1,199 white and 1,480 colored. The entire board sold at 9c. + Russell, June 12.â€"At the Russell Cheese Board toâ€"night 285 white and 110 colored offered. All sold at Qc. loade ol good stock gold at the top price, asd more would have been taken at the eame figure. The first shipment of new potatoes wase placed on the market ; they were foreign atock, of good qua‘ity, and were quotâ€" ed at $5.59 per barrel. Cheese Markets., Kingston, June 12.â€"At toâ€"day‘s sesâ€" sion of the Cheese Board 1,620 boxes were roegistered, the Board being cleaned out at 87â€"8c. Woodstock, June 12.â€"At the moetâ€" ing of the Cheese Board held here this morning W%0 cheese wore offerâ€" ed for sale, consisting of 450 white and 480 colored. From 87â€"8¢ to 9c was bid, but only one jot of 80 boxes was â€" sold, which brought 8 7â€"8c. Picton, June 12.â€"At the Cheese Board toâ€"day 1% factories boarded 280 white and 73W colored ; total, 1,016. Highest bid, 9¢; 650 sold. Dreeged Hogsâ€"lleceipts very light, and market etoady at 8875 to #9.25 per cwt. TaC cwt 1 75 to i 0) to Jul 0 74 3â€"4 0 69 1â€"2 0 67 1â€"8 0 71 5â€"8 0 T2 3â€"4 5 00 4 50 # >

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