West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Jun 1901, p. 3

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iless you are lean by need more fat. eat enough ; you are mefit of it. nulsion of codâ€"liver oil 1 digest your food, and r plumpness of health, true of babies. %ll .°A:':‘I.‘::.° .'T' w9. ECOME WEALTHY,. s on every f'n.( ',1! the genuta®e omoâ€"()ifinc Tablete . nros =» ©%‘d in one day IC A N N~1 HAVE l-"&:'a HANDâ€" ed rooms for â€"Amer vate residence loratorh. rict. 5 minutes from main tlon ; breakfast if desi with bath. Addreas J. gton avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. side N‘S DROPS. Scotch Remedy 1901 00 and i ARM FOR SALE, FORTYâ€" good buildings; possession > W . 8. w.u':-. Scarbor® nental Life anee Company THE WM. PAYNE IMâ€" has no o%w: differs from worn continuoualy; perfeot presentatives wanted ; sond ® Wra. Payne Co., Londes, Oll."!' &0 A"(P:.iis b%mm.' . large orchard, cho t, brick house, o‘tbnlldm in good condition, s ennox, Goderich. 8 ~ Adaves 4 Stee en s ND ACRES FOR 3 : _ acre, _ near _c..‘.‘.‘fif iapit yYOUu ‘ _ acre, near C raham, Butler, Pa. OR SALEâ€"ONE OF THES om Hamiiton on tweo tai \, 33 of which is in fratk ’filbonulnoum. 15 to D acres to sult decided ‘bargain é ie, P. 0. box 108, NO 26 1901, Columbia Girls Wanted W ht M A# i!l buy. Cleans gold man silver, bras% i n« your address, . you sell it. retarn «end you the wateh mmail. Addreas the 160 Catharines, Ont. wOMEX _ TO w_n-ril’. w_or!il_‘ vays caused own‘s Drops v:i > and descriptive ay pucking and aid on receipt of 81,500,000 ® m bar. no stTaP% e or lone off; cam ies 14 lbe.; 500 VISITORS this district. o. B. Woods, ral Manager. main e of Life Inâ€" 1arantee the rd to loans, ended insurâ€" §§1SC8. D ET" BICYCLE Proprietor, "utton, Que and set «ilver c. for selling P‘oliâ€"<h, sdmndâ€" mpa n y rds 1 OM ved From tan cents. Ont. ur object ia : First, al. Save spend as and put llow out time you rich as to save th.â€"San m in the s at y there »ysician medical 8 a disâ€" e other intance »X!¢c, and ne NoOw Hruu*. and in Toledo Bufâ€" 1me, by s Money is a goldenâ€"breasted bird with miver beak. It alights om the office desk or on the parlor center table. Men and women stand and admire it. They do not notice that it has wings larger than a raven‘s, larger than a famingo‘s, larger than an eagle‘s. One wave of the hand of misfortune and it spreads its beautiful plumeage and is goneâ€""as an eagle toward heaven," my text says, though sometimes I think it goes in the other direction. What a verification we have had of the fiying capacity of riches in Wall street! And Wall street is one of the lenmgest streets in the world. It does not begin at the foot of Trinity church, New York, and end at the East river, as many people suppose. It reaches through all our American cities and across the sea. Encouraged by the reâ€" vival of trade and by the fact that Wall street disasters of other years were so far back as to be forgotten, speculators ran up the stocks from point to poin‘t until innocent people on the outside supposed that the stocks would always continue to ascend. They gather in from all parts of the country. Large sums of money are taken in to Wall street and small sums of money. The crash comes, thank God, in time to warn off a great many who were on their way thither, for the sadness of the thing is that a great many of the young men of our cities who save a Mttle money for the purpose of startâ€" ing themselves in business, and who have $500 or $1,000 or $2,000 or $10,000 go into Wall street and lose all. And if there was ever a time for the pulpit to speak out in regard to certain kinds of nefarious enterprises now is the time. Stocks rose and fell, and now they begin to rise again, and they wiil fall again until thousands of young men will be ruined unless the printâ€" ing press and the pulpit give emphaâ€" tic utterance. My counsel is to counâ€" trymen, so far as they may hear of this discourse, if they have surplus to invest, invest it in mortgages and in moneyed institutions which, though paying comparatively small interest, are sound and safe beyond dispute, and to stand clear of the Wall street vortex, where so many have been swamped and swallowed. What a compliment it is to the healthy conâ€" dition of our country that these reâ€" cent disasters have in nowise deâ€" pressed trade! I thank God that Wall street‘s capacity to blast this country has gone forever. Across the island of New York ln] 1685 a wall made of stone and earth and cannon mounted was buii; to keep off the savages. Along by that wall a street was laid out, and as the street followed the line of the wall it was appropriately called Wall street. It is narrow, it is unarchitecâ€" tural, and yet its history is unique. Excepting Lombard street, London, It is the mightiest street on this planet. There the government of the United States was born. There Washâ€" ington held his levees. . There Mrs. Adams and Mrs. Caldwell and Mrs. Knox and other brilliant women of the revolutionm displayed their charms. There Witherspoon and Jonathan Edâ€" wards and George Whiteflield someâ€" times preached. There Dr. Mason chided Alexander Hamilton for writâ€" Ing the constitution of the United EStates without any God in it. There negroes were sold in the slave mart. There criminals were harnessed to wheelbarrows and, like beasts of burden, compellied to draw or were lashed through the streets behind carts to which they were fastened. There fortunes have come to coronation or burial since the day when reckless speculators in powdered hair and silver shoe buckles dodged Dugan, the goverâ€" norâ€"general of his majesty, clear down to yesterday at three o‘clock. The hisâ€" tory of Wall street is to a certain exâ€" tent the financial, commercial, agriculâ€" tural, mining, literary, artistic, moral and religious history of this country. There are the best men in this country, and there are the worst. Everything from unswerving integrity to tiptop scoundrelismâ€"everything from heavenâ€" born charity to bloodiess Shylockism. I want to put the plow im at the curbâ€" stone at Trinity and drive it clear through to Wall street ferry. And so it shall go if the horses are strong enough to draw the plow. First of all, Wall street stands as a type in this country for tried inâ€" tegrity and the most outrageous vilâ€" lainy. Farmers who have only a few hundred dollars‘ worth of produce to put on the market have but little to test their character, but put & man into the seven times heated furnace of Wall street excitement and he either comes out a Shadrach, with bair unsinged, or he is burned into & black moral cinder. No half way awork about it. If I wanted to find Antegrity bombproof, I would &9 among the bankers and merchants of Wall street, yet because there have heen such villainies enacted there at €@ARR CR ETT ERRTTTC CMWTCC posed that it is a great fAinancial deâ€" RBauchery, and they hardly dare go mear the street or walk up or down Ht unless they have buttoned up their last pocket and had their lives inâ€" PE s on o0 en nidty Cofecass @ifferent tl};iéa some men have supâ€" N CC Eoifmpim o cguuls | dn mear the slTCCL it unless they h last pocket an @ured or relig welves. Yet if 7 of the street al eigns you will f men of integrit wience than Y same space in our cities. Wh mission and the wanted money bandages _ to breadstuffs were ing Ireland, wh endowed and _ supported and were to be equ ef sending the world, the first g..2s Wall «tre eigns you will find the names of more men of Integrity and Christian benevâ€" wience than you can find in the same space in any street of any of our cities. When the Christian comâ€" mission and the sanitary commission wanted money to send medicine and bandages to the wounded, when breadstuffs were wanted for famishâ€" ing Ireland, when colleges were to be endowed and churches were to be supported and missionary societies were to be equipped for their work ef sending the gospel all around the wrorid, the first street to respond has Dbeen Wl «treet, and the largest reâ€" uponses in all the land have come from Wail street. i. .‘JBut srpile that street is a Sype Of M-‘t EeV PC 4 or religiously crossed themâ€" es. Yet if you atart at either end the street and read the busines: _ Las will find the names of more tried integrity on one hand it is also a type of unbounded swindle on the other. There are the spiders that wait for innocent flies. There are the anacondas, with lifted loop, ready to crush the unwary. There are finanâ€" clal wreckers, who stand on the beach praying for a Caribbean whirlâ€" wind to sweep over our commercial interests. Let me say it is no place for & man to go into business unless his moral principle is thoroughly settled. That is no place fcr a man to E&0 into business whe dacses no*t know when he is overpaid $5 by mistake whether he had better take it back or not. That is no place for a man to go who has large funds in trust and who is all the time tempted to speculate with them. That is no place for a man to go who does not quite know whether the laws of the state forbid usury or patronise it. Oh, how many men have risked themâ€" selves in the vortex and gone down for the simple reason their integrity had not been thoroughly established. Remember poor Ketcham. How soon the flying hoofs of his iron greys clattered with him to his destrucâ€" tion! Remember poor Gay, at 30 years of age astonishing the world with his fortunes and his forgeries. Remember that famous man whose steamboats and. whose opera houses could not atone for his adulterous rides through Central park in the face of decent New York and whose behavoir on Wall. stret by its °xâ€" ample has blasted tens of thousands of young men of this generation. I hold up the polluted memory to warn young men whose moral princiâ€" ples are not thoroughly settled . to keevn out of Wall street. It is no place for a man who shivers under the blast of temptation. Let me say also to those who are doing a legitimate business on that or similar streets of which that is a type to stand firm in (Christian principle. You are in & great commercial battlefleld. Be courâ€" ageous. There is such a thing aAs & hero of the bank and a hero of the stock exchange. You be that hero. I have not so much admiration for the French empress who stood in her balcony ia Paris and adressed An excited mob and quelled it as I have admiration for that venreable banker on Wall street who in 1864 stood on the steps of his moneyed instituâ€" tion and quieted the fears of deposiâ€" tors and bade peace té the angry wave of commercial excitement. God did not allow the lions to hurt Daniel, and he will not allow the "bears‘" to hurt you. Remember, my friend, that all these scenes of business will so0n have passed away, and by the law of God‘s eternal right all the affairs of vyour business life will be adjudicated. Honesty pays best for both worlds. Excitement following excitement unâ€" til all kinds of gambling projects came forth. There was a large company formed with a great capital for proâ€" viding funerals for all parts of the land. Another company with large capitalâ€"£5,000,000 of capitalâ€"to deâ€" velop a wheel in perpetual motion. Another company with a capital of £4,000,000 to insure people against loss by servants. Another company with £2,500,000 capital to transplant walnut trees from Virginia to England. Then, to cap the climax, a company was formed for "a great undertaking, noâ€" body to know what it is." And, lo, £600,000,000 in shares were offered at £100 a share. Books were opened at 9 o‘clock in the morning and closed at $ o‘clock in the afternoon, and the first day it was all subscribed. . "A great undertaking, nobody to know what it f Again, I have to remark that Wall street is a type throughout the counâ€" try of legitimate speculation on the one hand and of ruinous gambling on he other. Almost every merchant is tn some extent a speculator. He deâ€" pends not only upon the difference beâ€" tween the wholesale price at which he gets the goods and the retail at which he disposes of them, but also upon the fluctuation of the markets.. If the markets greatly rise he greatly gains. If the markets greatly sink, he greatly loses. It is as honest to deal in stocks as to deal in iron or coal or hardware or dry goods. He who conâ€" demns all stock dealings as though they were iniquitous simply shows his own ignorance. Stop all legitimate specuâ€" lation in this country and you stop all banks, you stop all factories, you stop all storehouses, you stop all the great financial prosperities of this country. A stock dealer is only a commission merchant under another name. He gets his commission on one style of goods. The dollar that he makes is just as bright and fair and honest a dollar as the dollar earned by the day laborer. But here we must draw the line between legitimate speculation and gambling. You, a stock operator, without any property behind you, financially irresponsible, sell $100 of nothing and get paid for it. You sell 100 shares at $10,000 at 30 days. If all the end of 30 days you can get the scrip for $9,000, you have made â€" a thousand. If at the end of 30 days you have to pay $11,000, then you have lost a thousand. Now that is trafficking id fiction: that is betting on chances; that involves the spirit of gambling as much as anything that ever goes on in the lowest gambling hell. At certain times armost every prosâ€" perous merchant wakes up, and he says ‘"Now, I have been successful in my line of trade and I have a tolerable income. I think I shall go down to Wall street and treble it in three weeks. There‘s my neighbor. He has his $300,000 or $400,000 from the simple fact that he went into Wall street. I think I shall go, too." Here they come, retired merchant, who want to get & little excitement in their lethargic veins. Here they come, men celeâ€" brated for prudence, to trifie with the livelihoods of widows and orphans. Do you wonder that sometime* they men who are perishing under the pasâ€" sion for stock gambling? Do you know, that in A}} Christian lands this become insane? It is insanity. Do you know there are }mudred- of young ie Ty" is one of the greatest curses? ‘An old magazine of those days deâ€" scribes the scene (Hunt‘s Magazine). It says: "From morning until evenâ€" ing ‘change alley was full to overâ€" flowing with one dense, moving mass of living beings, composed of the inâ€" congruous materials and in all things save the mad pursuit wherefor they were employed utterly opposite in their principles and feelings and far asunder in their stations in life and the professions they follow. Statesâ€" j men and clergymen deserted their high stations to enter upon this great theaâ€" ter of speculation and gambling. Churchmen ang dissenters left their fierce disputes and forget their wrangâ€" lings upon church government in the deep and hazardous game they were playing for worldly treasures and for riches, which, if gained, were liable to disappear within an hour of their creaâ€" tion. <â€" Whigs and Tories buried their weapons of political warfare, discardâ€". ed party animosities and mingled toâ€". gether in kind and friendly interâ€" _course, each exulting as the‘r stocks _advanced in price and grumsling when fortune frowned 1 pon them. Lawyers, physicians, merchants and traveling men forsook their employment, neâ€" glected their business, disregarded their engagements to whirl along in the stream, to be at last engulfed in the wild sea of bankruptcy. Females mixed with the crowd, forgetting the station and employment which nature had fitted them to adorn, and dealt boldy and extensively and, like those by whom they were surrounded, rose from poverty to wealth and from that were thrown down to beggary and want, and all in one short week, and perhaps before the evening which terâ€" minated the first day of their speculaâ€" tion. Ladies of high rank, regardless of every appearance of dignity and blinded by the prevailing infatuation, drove to the shops of their milliners and haberdashers and there met their stockbrokers, whom they regularly employed and through whom extensive sales were A4aily negotiated. In the midst of the excitement all distincâ€" tions of party and religion and cireumâ€"= stances and character were swallowed up." O, men of Wall street and of all streets, stand back from nefarious enterprises, join that great company of Christian men who are maintainâ€" ing their integrity, notwithstanding all the pressure of temptation. In the morning, when you open business in the broker‘s office or in the bankâ€" ing house, ask God‘s blessing, and when you close it pronounce a beneâ€" diction upon it. A king of business that men cannot engage in without prayer is no business for you. I wish uttered in the hearing of the people of his native townâ€"Danvers, Mass.â€"I wish that those words could be uttered in the hearing of all the young men throughout the land. He said: : "Though Providence hat granted me unvaried and universal success in the pursuit of fortune in other lands I am still in heart the huinble boy who left yonder unpretending awelling. There is not a youth within the sound of my voice, whose early opporâ€" tunities and advantages are not very much greater than were ‘my own, and I have since achieved nothing that is impossible to the most humlile boy among you." George Peabody‘s sucâ€" cess in business was not more remarkâ€" able than his integrity and his great hearted benevolence. I pray upon you God‘s protecting and prospering blessâ€" ing. I hope you may all make forâ€" tunes for time and fortunes for eterâ€" nity. Some day when you come out of your place of business and you go to the clearing house or the place of custom of the bank or your own homeâ€"as you come out of your place of business just look up at the clock in the tower and see by the moveâ€". ment of the hands how you® Hfe is rapidly going away and be reminded of the fact that before Gnd‘s throne: of inexorable judgment you must yet give account for what you have done since the day you sold the first yard of cloth or the first pound of sugar. I pray for you gli prosperity. Stand close to Christ, and Christ will stand close by you. The greater the tempâ€" tation the more magnificent the reâ€" ward. But, alas, for the stock gamâ€" blerâ€"what will he do in the judgâ€" ment ? That day will settle everyâ€" thing. That to the stock gambler will be a "break" at the ‘"first call." No smuggling into heaven. No "colâ€" laterals" on which to trade your way in. Go in through Christ the Lord or you will forever stay out. God forâ€" bid that after you have done your last day‘s work on earth and the hushed assembly stands around with bowed head at your obsequiesâ€"God forbid that the most appropriate text for your funeral oration should be, "As a partridge sitteth on eggs and hatcheth thtm not, so he that getteth riches, CRISINE MUL, MV SV c cidll. cedatesdiate: F and not by right, shall leave them in the midst of his days, and at the end he shall be a fool." "A woman‘s disposition can _ be shown by the pitch of her volce." *"More especially whe» the rtteh is Rot used to blacken another‘s charâ€" acter,"â€"Philageiphla Times, ._. . i .: hn m 207 n l & +fi Alive. o t ol Wedrs. Aolwe dn yat ie racitinl n dose No | Mc Cc ooo h t S aner n toue P . se l F4 T 1 PP m ImmDet. TB en i The New Convictâ€"This is a very poor room. The Cheerful Convictâ€"Yes; a regular cell. Woman‘s Pitches. DISSATISFIED SUNDAY SCHOOL INXTEENATIONAL LKSSON NV.X11l JUNE 30, 1901. Review.â€"1Cor. 15: 12.% Summaryâ€"Leason I. Topic: The risen Christ. Place: At and near Calâ€" vary. Christ was crucified on Friday, April 7th ; ross early Sunday mornâ€" ing. April 9th ; eeveral women were To‘ e en e d S early at the tomb; the stone wAaS rolled away ; the women entered the sepulchre; â€" Christ wase pot there ; two angels appeared in the form of men ; their faces were like lightning andi their garments were dazz‘ling ; the wom>n were afraidl; the angee told them Christ had risen ; they go to tell the dieciples, who cannot beâ€" lieve; â€" Peter anl John run to the tomb. [ ns 1i. Topic: Jesus makinz Himsel{ known. Place: Near the sepulchre. Mary Magdalene returned and'su"fi anRotd 95 ARBRHE e tntie CE CA 0 all near the tomb weepng;, ehe looked into the eepu‘chre ; saw two angels in white; they, amked her why she wept ; w1e replied that they had taken away her Lord and «he did not know where they had laid Him ; turnâ€" ing, she saw Jeeus, but supposed Him to be the gardener; He @poke her name ; #he knew H m ; He sent her to tell the dieciples He had risen. k EoC T 0R RaRe n omm it AEC CC O Cemeaics III. Topic : Chriet the fulfiment of proplheey. Place : Emmaus an 1 Jeruâ€" éalem. Two disciples journey to Emâ€" maug, aA Village seven and oneâ€"hal{ milee northwest of Jerusalem. They talk together anl are ead ; Jesus draws noar ; they do not know H‘m : Ho quesetions them ; they relate what hod recently occurre i ; Jeeus explaing the Scripture@; they arrive at Emâ€" maug@; Jegus is urged to abide with them; makee H mself known: vanishe® out of their eight ; they return to Jeruealem. W OW NeCY COIIT IV. Topic: Jesus convincing the apostles of his resurrection. . Place: Jerusalem. It is the evening of the resurrection Sanday; the disciples are assembled; Thomas is abâ€" sent : Jesus enters; shows his hands and feet; blesses them; gives them authority over sin; Thomas would not believe ; one week later Jesus apâ€" pears again ; Thomas present ; sees Christ and is convinced that he has really arisen; Jesus pronounces A blessing on those who believe though they have not seen. vÂ¥. ‘Topic: Peter‘s love for Christ. Place: â€" The sea of Galilee. The disâ€" ciples in Galilee ; Peter and six others go a fishing ; toil all night and catch nothing ; Jesus appears on the shore : tells them to cast the net on the right side of the ship ; it is filled with fish ; they know him; after they dine Jesus asks Simon a question. VI. Topic: Christ commissioning His apostles. Place: _A mountain in Galilee. An appointment had boen made by Jesus to meet the disciples in Galilee. The apostles and many disciples are present. Jesus appears before them ; they worship Him ; some doubted ; Jesus tells them of His power ; commissions them to go, to teach all nations and to baptize; promisges to be with them alway. VII. Topic: Christ‘s parting words. Place: Mount Olivet. Jesus opens their understanding ; shows from the Scriptures that Christ must have sulâ€" fered and have risen from the dead ; speaks of the great salvation that is provided for all nations ; leads the disciples out to Bethany; they ask Him to restore the kingdom to Israel ; He promiges the Holy Spirit to them ; they are to tarry in Jerusalem ; while they behold He is parted from them ; He will come again. VIII. Topic: The pentecostal bapâ€" tism. Place: Jerusalem. At the feast of the Pentecost, fifty days from the Passover ; the disciples assemâ€" bled in an upper room ; with one acâ€" cord ; suddenly a sound from heaven; "tongues like as of fire" sat upon them ; they were filled with the Holy Ghost; epake with other tongues ; the multitude heard the sound and came together ; were conâ€" founded and marveled because every man heard them speak the wonderâ€" ful work of God in his own language. IX. Topic: The _ excellency of Christ‘s priesthood. The Mosaic tabâ€" ernacle was a type of the good things to come. _ o X. Topic: Saul‘e conversion. Place: Jerugsalem. Paul is in the temple with those who are observing the forms of the Nasarite vyow; his enâ€" emies charge him with polluting the temple; they drag hbim out ; he is rescued by the Roman guard ; is perâ€" mitted to speak for hiniself ; speaks of his life before his conversion ; how the Lord appeared to him near Damâ€" ascus, at noon ; how Ananias came to him, and instructed and baptized XI. Topic: The glorified Naviour. Pliace: The Isle of Patmos: John the Apostle is banished to Patmos for his testimony for Christ. saw a new heaven, a new cearth, and the new Jerusalem coming down from God out of heaven. All tears, paln and death are passed away. PRACTICAL SURVEY. Lesson I. The empt‘y grave was the boundary iine between the old dispensation and the new. ‘"‘The eubâ€" limest expectations of the Old Testaâ€" _ XII. Topic: The happy st‘ate of the righteous. Place: Patmos. John meot were now fullilled in the reâ€" gurrention of Jesus. In the world He ctapgde mpmqueror of ein and jJoath, ONTARIO ARCHI % TORONTO "The resurrection was a crowning victory to Jesus Himsel{. It set a seal to the truth of all His teachâ€" ings, both of Himsel{ and to others, as well as all His works. The resurâ€" rection morn was a time of gladâ€" neses to the disciples of Jesue, and it is the true comfort of all beâ€" lievere." â€" ty l n § II. Duriog the time Jesus was in the tomb the disciples must have beer greatly discouraged. Jesus had told them of His death and resurrecâ€" tion, but they did not comprehend His words. Nothing could dispel the gloom lw.a actually seeing His face and knowing that He was alive. His first appearance to Mary Magdalene filled her with great joy. III Christ‘s love was manifested in Hie careful instruction to His disâ€" ciples â€" on leaving them. He gave them new Ability and epiritual â€" inâ€" sight into the Seriptures. He disâ€" covered to them the goiden thread running through the entie Seriptures, which revealed Christ as the _ exâ€" pected Saviour ol men from the beâ€" ginning. Here they were enabled to grasp the sense of his former teachâ€" ing and comnect it with the writâ€" ten Scriptures. IV. Christ appeared to His disâ€" ciplee when they were assembled on the evening of the resurrection day, and then one week later. He qui~ted their fears and banisied all their doubts. They saw His feet and hands, and woere permitted to put their hands upon Him. Even the one with the greatest unbelie{ was satâ€" isfied that the resurrection was a fact. V. "Christ loved His toiling disciples and, by His superhuman | power, brought them temporal success ~and thus was revealed to them as they brought in the great draught â€" of fishes. Through their natural sense He drew them on to know Him as risen. By this means He taught them of epiritual labor in reaching men‘s sou!s and bringinz them to Christ. VIL ‘The great commission. _ Jesus always keeps His promises. He told the disciples He would meet them in a certain place in Galilee on a certain lime., and Ho was there. He has proâ€" mised to meet with His people when they assemble in His name. _ Jesus should be worshipped. We are not in a condition to receive a commission from Christ, or to help others, until we are true worshippers ourselves. YIL *Thoeâ€" ascension of Jesus did not throw over the apostles the sadâ€" ness which they experienced at His crucifixion. He ascended a living Savâ€" iour, leaving them assured that they were not to live without His care, but should be assisted by the Holy Ghoet to carry out His commands. And before their eyes were turned from gazing upward toward heaven the angelâ€"messengers brought a sweet message of hope and comfort, declarâ€" ing that Jesus should return in like manneras He went. not changed, but as they last saw Him. YIII It is possibl»> for the soul to be fully imbued with the _ divine nature, bearing in all its manifestaâ€" tions some plain resemblance to its God, conveying to all on whom it acts some impression of Him. mountâ€" ing heavenward in all its movements, and harmoniously pouring forth from all its facultics the praises of the IX. Thriet our high priest. 1. His first great work was to provide a proper sacrifice for «in. This He Cid by giving Himeel{. Hiz} was a perfect offeringâ€"a ®@uicrilice inlinitely greatâ€" er, grandier and nobler than the sacâ€" rifices cffered under the Levitical priesthood. The blood of bulls and goate was not precious, but Christ‘s blood is preci us. There was no power in thome éacrifices to save the soul or cleans> from sin, but there is efilcacy ani power in the blood of Christ to do both. Thoes sacrificecs were for ons emall nation, Christ‘s is for the whole world. ° X. Paul‘@ conversion. First, God brought him jow. He was persecuting Jemus with madness, seeking to exâ€" tirpate H‘e name, His word and His Church. He wase arrested, and his etrength and sight taken from him. God humb‘ed and eubdued him. Then it was that he could turn his eyes upon his own heart and see his own wickednees. And now, in order to bring Paul into fellowehip with the followers of Christ, a humble disciple, whose very life he had so recently been #geeking, was sent to open to him the kingdom of God. XI. Chriet appearing to John. Jt wae no Roman Emperor that had brought John to Patmos, but God H‘mself. The Lord had placed John right where He wanted him, And now Jeeus shows John H‘s glory. _ This would encourage John and etrengthâ€" en hie faith. Jesug shows John that He in in the milst of His people to comfort, etrengthen and lead them. He pereonally watches the candle eticks, supplying the material for the light, and al@o keeping them burning. XII. Chriet will surely make all thinge new. The time is coming when the thinge we now see and handle will have entirely pagsed away. A new heaven, a new earth,. and a new city on that new â€" earth, whatever may. be meantâ€"the@s are all before ue. Paul had a glimpse of the tlnir«& Heaven, but was not perm‘tted 1« tell ue what he saw. John. by meane of e@trong figurative language. underâ€" takee to give us an llea of the glors that awa‘ite the finally faithful. Tartar Village Obliterated and Its Inbabitants Slain. Vienna cable says: The Volksblat publighes a message from St. Peters burg giving an account of a fearâ€" ful act of lynch justice, _ _ _ The Tartar inhabitants of the vilâ€" lage of Irbeisk, on the River Yeniâ€" sel, had for a long time made themâ€" selves a nuisance to the people of the neighboring district. ~ NÂ¥ The latter finally lost their paâ€" tience, and, arming themselves with huge stickse, axes, farm implements, and seimilar weapons, proceeded to avenge themselves on the Tartare of Irbelsk. _ 0_ 0_ _ . _ (9 x C7C PB RPCECCCT They lynched the whole population of Irbeisk, men, women, and . chilâ€" dren alike, and threw the bodies into the Â¥enisei. Afterwards they demolâ€" ished the entire village, and burnt all the wreckage. The place was, in fact, wiped off the face of the earth. The Russian authoritiee . were subsequently able to arrest over 100 peasants w}lo ‘had taken part in the terrible act of vengeance. offlicers and 7. AZad Infantry, U. 8 Congress Bpeaker Hepderson is in Lopdon and will attend the Fourth of July dinner. The traneport Ohlo has arrived at Ban Francisco from Manila with 2_9 WHOLESALE LYNCHING. of a perfect liquid dentifrice for the M&um%flc SOZODONT TOOTH PO‘ , 25¢ Large LIQUID and POWDER, 75¢ At all Stores, or by Mail for the price. Leanding Wheat Markets. Following are the closing quotaâ€" tions at important wheat centres toâ€" day‘: Cash. Bept. CHNCIKI »» :: x} :0 22â€" $â€" 80 68 3â€"4 New YOTk .. ... .. .. â€"â€"â€" 0O 74 1â€"4 "DOBONY 21. xt uns ns s« AYTL 0 70 3â€"4 Detroit, red, No. 2 072 1â€"4 0 72 14 Detroit, white,No.1 073 m se ,Dumiuth, No. 1 nor. 0 69 38 0 68 1â€"4 Du‘uth, No. 1 hard O 72 3â€"8 â€"â€" Minneapolie, â€" No. 1 CCA northern .. .. ... â€"â€" 60 5â€"8 Toroato Farmers‘ Market. Wheatâ€"Steady and unchanged ; 200 bushels of white and 200 bushels of red sold at 70 1â€"2¢ and 300 bushels of goose at 64c. ; The Markets Teeth »« Mouth Oatsâ€"Market â€" easier ; 600 bushole lc lower at 36e to 37 1.â€"2¢. HALL & RUCKEL, MONTREAL ®moked moatsâ€"Hams, 13 to 13%e¢ rolls, 11% to 12¢; backs, 14% to l1L¢ and shoulders, 10% to ile. _ t Lardâ€"Pails, 11 1â€"4¢; tubs, 11¢ thierces, 10%e. FToronto Live Stock Markets. Export cattle, choice, per owt. $5 00 to $ $ _ AOMCUDM . 2200 se00 ++ 0e +> EXDONL OOWE ......sss:2001.%+% Buichers‘ caitle picked....... Butchers‘ cattle, chorce..... ... Butchers‘ cattle fair........... MLQ NO MA : £x 004 + x 1428 23 454 4 2 6 0 O DUINE: .: + )x srens a+4rc%s Bulls, export. heary, per owl. Bulis. export, light, per Cwt... Feeders, shortâ€"keep ...... ..... doamlo&l.;um..u. w doil i ge 4 Stockers, 100 to 610 lbs........ .. offâ€"colore and heifers Milch cows, each... ... Sheep, cwes per cwt. 40. DHGIKG, . . ++ + > + » + EO NOMLNEN,: : 5s 33 4 s 1 x x 1 + xi Lambs, spring, each . Ualves, per head .... ... Hogs, choice, per owt. Hogs, corn fed......... Hogs, light, per Cwt Hu!.l‘fnl,, per owl Sows, per CWL....... Fruit Market. Domesltic fhaits are b»eginmng . i0 come â€" forward rather freely and strawberries in particular are movâ€" ing well. â€" The first shipment of Canâ€" adian cherries was received toâ€"day. They were bMzht, juaicy fruit, apd sold readily at $1 per basket. Toronto Hides and Wool. Hides, green, 5 1â€"2 to 7¢ ; cured, T to 7 1â€"2e¢. Calfskins, No. 1, ue ; No. 2, 8Sc. Deacons, dairies, each 6) to 65c. Shoepskins, fresh, 90¢ to $1. Tallow, rendered, 5 to 5 lâ€"ic. Wool, fleece, 13 to 14¢ ; unwashed, lleece, 8 to 9e. Braustreet‘s un Prade. Trade at Montreal has been quiet the past week. There is a larger movement in dairying sections and an expansion in the money clreulaâ€" tion in those parts of the Province which have brought about some imâ€" provement in remittances. There is BR Wis Ee oc " on Sgcartns a good demand for are steady. Trade at Toronto has not been speeâ€" ially active this week. There has been a fair demand for sorting parcels of seasonable dry goods, and in hardâ€" ware the movement has been fairly large. There has been a marked improveâ€" ment in business at Winnipeg since the opening of the present month. This is largoly owing to the improve» ment in crop conditions. Trade at the coast has been mod» erately active in a few lines lately, but the threatemed trouble in â€" the canning industry has acte] to some extent as a drawback in trade. The demand from the interior for supplie@ is fair. yyroF f es B PHLMF+ Business at Hamilton has been fair this week. The manufacturers have been busy on fall orders and labor is well employed in the city. _ The orders from _ travellers is satisfac» tory, both for current requirements and for the autumn. Collections are fairly good. The reports from vari ous parts ol the Dominion, â€" repreâ€"» sented by travellers of _ Hamilton houses, are yery satisfactory. They all indicate a large improvement of goods for the comink sena on The sales of goods for the current eeason‘s requirements at â€" Ottawa have been vyery falr. A good sorting trade is being done in some lines, re tailers having postponed purchases In that respect till etocks began to show â€"reductions. Fall business 18 good, and the indications are that trade in that respect will be very large. At Quebec business continuee modâ€" erately active _ in wholesale cirâ€" cles. Travellers are eending in fair orders for fall dAwlivery, and it Jn generally expected that the valume wlllbeugoodulnputnuonc TRHEORY AND PRACTICEK. Jt is reported that the Rev. Dr. Charles Sheldon, of Topeka, Kansas, who wrote a book advising employers to treat their servants as equals, is having serious domestic troubles. His wife last week refused to alâ€" low the servant girl to dine with the family. The girl promptly gave up her place, and before leaving she reminded Mrs. Sheldon that her busâ€" band had recently solved the servanmt girl problem by declaring that doâ€" mestics should have equal wlvne: with the family. Mre. Sheldon told girl that she was not responsible for her hueband‘s opinions ; he could write books, but she intended to rule the nemsehold. The pastor‘s dilemma is to have money and rates # 96° 75¢ 6 87%to 6 6214u0 6 621410 to 5 5 30 U 00 0 60 »M 1 | $

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