lassey Harris improvements a few days, these other shop where L price. XACHINES,.â€"â€" HAY FORKS, et c ARRIAGE Licen ses EB || crats and Carts ix months ago., URKHANM. ham o see, reduced in itively the easiest 3333 Harris Drill, $E OYre. Box 1, 1901 DEFR naps «« < « 00 CKK «+«« CC ««+«« hC . .. « 90 C ««« @ELOO $3.75 d Big 4 > â€"â€" vests from........... . d¢,. to 25¢. ea. Table Linen 3 in. wide....... 25¢. a yd, Table Oil Cloth 45 in. wide. .. 25¢. * "uggy Dusters from . ... 60c, to $1.50 ea. anlv. Glass Table Setts....... 30¢. ea. only, Glass Table Setts. ... ... 30¢. ea. ; Conly, Glass Berry Bowls... ... 10c, ea. Glass and nappies from .. 30 to 65¢, doz. 1 only, genuine Oil Pain tings on canvas 2 by 36 in. with 4 in, gold leaf frames UMIY ......«c.irrxreudrersse¢i0% $1,.50 ea Dont forget us when you want a pair 0 Shoes as we carry a full line of Sterling Bros. selebrated make of Shoes. We always have a full ot best Groceries. Toilet Soaps 2¢. a cake and up. W. H. BEAN Piques in White and Fancy.. 18¢. a yd. Dress Ginghams, just the thing for childrens dresses. . 7 to 10c. a yd. White and Cream Silk Gloves 45c¢c. a pr. White Taffett Gloves. ........ 25¢, * wWhite and Black Silk Mits. ... 25¢c. °* Ladies‘® and Children‘s underâ€" _ TWEEDS & YARNS MacFarlane & Go. GROCERIES We ask Inspection of our TERS S$. sCOTT. ¢ +« Jake Kress. " e the Best _VÂ¥ 0 Q"alit{ Cheaper than Ever. @ & Indertaking Promptly @ @ attended to. : 0' JAKE KRESS $ 00sssmw“ood geaae2e0e0000000040 0 Headquarters | PURE PA'RIS GREEN AND ALL Insecticides DRUGS, BOOKS, Stationery, SEEDS, yriis * WM03 CHEAP ! ! SUMMER GOODS DRY GOODS, CROCKERY, BOOTS & SHOES, &c., Of best quality. can give you Bargains. AUGUST 1, 1901 Druggist & Booksellers. For Calder‘s BiOGk FURNITURE Ni One incident only the speaker said marred the joy of the hour : the elder brother refused to speak to him or to come in. _ We all condemn the elder brother, but alas! we too faithfully folâ€" low his example. Remember he did not hear his brother‘s confession, he did not know all that was in his heart ; he was as we are in the world with only the outside of things reyealed. and his cryâ€" ing sin was that he would not believe there was anything worthyv left in the brother. Inquiring how the young man in the parable could have left such a home, he cautioned against supposing that the blame could be shared between himself and his father, Earthly parents may err, but this father never. Nor was it because the young man wanted to know the world. We come to earth with two worlds to exploreâ€"one outside and around us and one of our appetites and passions and it was our work to explore both and subdue them. This home he said was not penned up with a gate, but stretched out wide as the world. The speaker instanced the case of a poor girl whise life was sadly wrecked, but after she was dead there was found on her person a poem helieved to be her own composition, which evidently told the true purpose of ber life. The poem began with the words: f "Once 1 was pure as the snow but I fell, Fell like the snowflakes from heaven to hell. Had we not seen thiat poem we would haye thrust her aside as did the elder brother ; perhaps she was jostled about But coming to * The Welcome," the speaker showed how so often the suspicâ€" ion was in the minds of the prodigal, that no one cared for him. Could he have looked into the old home and read the sorrow that had been so real since he left, how his heart would melt! He showed how much this Father had done : tales of the Good Shepherd, the Lost Money, and this porticn, were but faint echoes of the love that was true to the death. cause it was an ideal story. Jesus might have told what was actually the practice in Judea at the time, but, howâ€" eyer true to fact it would not haye been of much use. The parable had all its interese because it brought into our everyâ€"day liyes the breath of heaven itself, Proceeding to show why he wandered he indicated two causesâ€"selfishness and wilfulness. These he said, were the two strands of the rope that had drawn our first parents away and they had formed the power drawing away every prodigal since. Going on to inquire how he was brought back he dilated on the mission of pain and hunger in starting the reâ€" turn,. We complain because we suffer but pain was our friend. What a fearâ€" ful world it would be if we could hold our hand on the hot iron and no pain warn us that it was destroying it. Pain and anguish are means of our strengthâ€" ening the soul : they are mills of God, and, * The Mills of Godgrini slowly f But they grind eiceeding small." Well, if at any cost we are brought to this spirit and are ready to sayâ€"* I will arise and go to my father." on the street by those far less worthy as we perchance still do with many whom Christ is drawing to himself. , With evident emotion which was abundantly reflected in his hearers he proceeded to say that it is one of the parts of life‘s business to discover the spirit that lies behind all the prosaic accounts we read in the papers or see with our eyes. He had a little poem he wished to read, its music was not per fect, but he felt sure that if the speaker‘s vyoice broke as did some of the accents in the poem, there was, in all his hearâ€" ers, enough of life‘s true poetry to join in the tune. The full text of the poem with the Author‘s introduction, is found below, it turns out to be Mr. Farquharâ€" son‘s own composition and the matter reflects credit on his heart as well as his head. Its copy right for Candda has been applied for under the copy right act for the Durham Review. Starting with his subject he showed that the parable had retained its freshâ€" ness and interest in all generations beâ€" "Jesus, Saviour, pilot me, .__Over Life‘s tempestuous Sea." the event must have been in ever y mind. As Mr Farqubharson announced his subject "The: Welcome _ back of the Prodigal" eyery eye was fixed and eyery earattentive. His treatment of the subject was courageous, tactful and unique, and was presented from a beart pulsating with sympathy and filled with the milk of human kindness. [LatER.â€"The fact that news of Cecil Gun‘s safety is to hand in no wise deâ€" tracts from the interest of these colâ€" umns.â€"Ed.] The congregation in the Presbyterian church on Sabbath morning was sinallâ€" er tHan usual owing to the wet weather. The service was dominated with the sad feeling that peryaded the town over the confirmation of the news of the drowning of Cecil Gun. Not a word was said regarding the tragical ending of our Durham boy, but as the hymn was given out. A STRIKING SERMON. It & true that he had his failings ; But who is there left who has none, He wandered away {rom the homeland Ere the battle was well begun, Yet away in the far off country His hungering spirit would sigh, And the thought of the love he had forfeit Would start the hot tear in his eye. Hard is the life of the seaman, The way of transgressors more hard Bitter‘s the sense of repining, When no one his grief would regard. Yet hidden ‘neath all the rough wildâ€" ness, There are sensitive nerves that feel, Protected ‘mid all the wild roving, Is a heart that is true as the steel. With cruel anguish the message ® Like lashes descends with a smart And a sad and sickening sorrow Now burns as a fire in his heart, South Grey, Durham, Segg_24â€"25. Industrial, Foronto, Aug. 26â€"Sept 7. Western Fair, London, Sept 5â€"14, Glenelg, Markdale, October 8â€"9, Proton Tp., Dundalk,. October 1â€"2. North Grey, Owen Sound, October 2â€"4. Central Canada, Ottawa, Sept 11â€"22, Guelgh Central, Guelph, Sepc 17â€"19. Northern, Walkerton, Sept 18â€"19. Peterboro Central, Peterboro, Sept 24â€"26 Great Northern, Collingwood, Sept 24â€"27 North Western, Goderich, Oct 1â€"2. Bentinck, Hanover, October 1â€"2. Not ours to enter in judgment, Or mete out the guilt of another Ours the Heavenlier task to encourage And act the true part of a brother, May the Father who filled with rejoicâ€" ing The halls in the mansion of old To gladden the penitent tumin§ With feasting and purple and gold. P our out on us all of His spirit ; Enlightening our eyes to behold In the naked, the hungry and homeless A brother to win and to hold. May I fill the mission He‘s given me, And do while I‘m here what I may ; Lest our Lord when He cometh discover In me but a poor stowaway. On June 21st of this year the teleâ€" graph wire flashed over the continent the tidings that a lad aged only 18 who had come from London to Boston as a stowaway in the S. S. Virginian, and who bad been ordered deported by the Alien authorities, was drowned in an attempt to swim ashore in Black Rock Channel as the ship was leaving the harbor. The ftollowing lines are lovingly dedicated to the lad‘s mother in sympathy with her in ber sorrow, and in recognition of the manly qualiâ€" ties of the boy in successfully battling with the world at such an early age till the reverse overtook him which ended in his premature death. They said it was only a stowaway Brought from a distant strand, Some useless downtrodden pauper To swell the poor of our land. "Begone", was the message they sent him, ‘‘To land on our shore were a shame, ‘‘The likes of you are but seaweed ‘‘Washed up by the surging life‘s main". "I will arise and go to my Father" Is his cry in his burden of woe, ‘‘I shall show that still I remember "‘Tho‘ who would believe it was so ? "I shall show to the world that true courage, ‘‘‘The manliest power of the soul, * *‘Is not blotted out though misfortune "Like seaâ€"billows surge and roll. But alas for human ambition, Nor terror nor pain could enslave, The ocean tide raised its proud summit, And buried him under the wave. So all through the voyage of life How many with spirits as free, Find the waves and the billows so crushing That they‘re gulfed in the wild ragâ€" ing sea. Being lot No. 53 on the 3rd Con. 8. D. Road, Glenelg, containing 50 acres, 1} miles south of the flourishing village of Priceville. _ A new brick house on th premises with pump near by. Good land. Clear title will be given. Apply to Mrs. Mary McNulty, Lot 53, Con. 3, 8. D. R. All the good and the true shall conâ€" tinue, And with eyes more loving than we, Our Father looks down on His children As they‘re billowed on life‘s raging sea. A‘I Make us kindlier, gentler and truer, More ready to help and to love, More like the redeemed that encircle The throne in the mansions above, Yet fear not that aught that is worthy E‘en in purpose the good to aspire Will ever be lost or forsaken As embers to burn in the fire. C‘I Copyright nppiied for in Canada in acsordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act. By W. Farquharson, B. D,, Durham. shall dare the hopeless that seems, ** As I‘ve done in the days that are man, Or missing the mark, I shall die.‘"‘ by, shall swim to the shore like a freeâ€" ONLY A sTowaAwAY. Farm For Sale. FALL FAIRS. Priceville, Ontario. THE DURHAM REVIEWV C Catuet ed at the time of Sale, there will be offered for sale by Publhec Auction by Hugh MacKay, Eeq., Auctioneer at the Knapp House, in Town of Durham, on Wednesday, August 7th, 1901, at the hour of 2 O‘clock, p. m., the folâ€" lowing lands and premises :â€" The west half of Lot No. fifty in the second Concession east of the Garafraxa Road in the Township of Glenelg, in the County of Grey, containing by admeasâ€" urervent fifty acres be the same more or nder and by yirtue of the Power of U Sale, contained in a certain Indenâ€" ture of Mortgage which will be producâ€" TeErms OF SAL®K : 10% of the purchase money at the time of Sale, and the balâ€" ance within thirty days thereafter withâ€" out interest : or if the purchaser so deâ€" sire, 10 per cent at the time of sale, and the balance to be arranged according to the terms and conditions then to be made known. â€" For further terms and particulars, apply to Dated 5th July, A. D., 1901, C RA8484e.e0eee8ee00800e 0%+% MORTGAGE SALE OF FARM PROPERTY J. P. TELFORD, Durham, Vendortr‘s Solicitor . d y wties d ONTARIO ARCHIVES : TORONTO 90 | __ _ a1. | Tells oronghuqtell corsectly ARTHUR H. J 4 thâ€" the date to which you are paid. | NOTARY PUBLIC, COMM| 1e Changes and additions have aâ€" | a gain been made and we ask | CconVEYANCER, V ‘:o our friend to examine Closely. | Insurance Agent, be The price of the Review is 18) Private Mor nd a year in advanceâ€"$1.35 if not | poftections of all kind* so paid. _ The amount is small \ promptly aitended to 1 to subscribersâ€"to the publishâ€" s 4 66 many smalls count up fast‘.l i OrFICEâ€"â€" M_â€"â€"o Tengic‘s| * Co Ramage, Ed“o{)r;!pm:. Durham, Export Cattleâ€"Buyers were able to secure all the cattle they wanted yesterâ€" day, and a good many of them were out of the market toâ€"day. They report steamâ€" er space as scarce, and say that the old country market has not improved within the last two or three days. Shipping catâ€" tle sold slowly toâ€"day, and a fair proporâ€" tion failed to find buyers. Prices were ucchanged ; choice sold at $4.60 to $5.10, and medium including light weights, at $4.25 to $4.60. Cows were steady at $3.75 to $4.40â€" Live Stock Market Toronto. Little change was shown in the condiâ€" tion of trade at the Western Cattle Marâ€" ket toâ€"day, as compared with yesterday. The ran was smaller, but the demand continued light, and there was no activity. All the cattie offered had a tendency to drag, and a good many bead were left unâ€" sold. The range of prices for cattle is unchanged. Sheep are easier, but lambs, calves and Logs are unchanged. The total run was 62 loads, including 634 cattle, 1,232 sheep and lambs, 64 calyes and 1,384 hogs. Sheep, Lambs and Calvesâ€"Export ewes are again lower. selling of 10c per cwt. at $3,40 to $38.50. Bucks and culls are unâ€" changed. Lambs and calves are steady, ‘Wrade is rather slow and a good deal of stuff was left over. Hogsâ€"Market is weak, and lower prices are anticipated. â€" The offerings toâ€"day were rather heavy, and prices were unâ€" changed at $7.25 per ewt. for selects. $7 for cornâ€"fed and $6.75 for lights and fate. Butchers‘ Cattle â€"Fine cattle were wanted for local trade, but they were very searce. The offerings were rather heavy, but there were too many unfinishâ€" ed cattle. Bad ones are not wanted here at any price, but they keep coming in spite of that fact. _ They sellat yery low prices, and also effect the sale of the betâ€" ter classes. Prices are steady to firm for the good ones. Picked lots sell readily up to $4.72 and choice are in good demand at $4 to $4.40. Cows and bulls are quiet, with light offerings. Feeders and Stockersâ€"Market quiet with no offerings of heavy stock. Light feeders are in fair demand av $3.2%5 to $3.50 for yery choice animals, weighing 8CO to 950 lbs, while stockers sell at $3 to $3.25 for the best grades, Medium grades and offâ€"colors bring $2.50 to $3, and these constitute the greater fort.ion of the offerâ€" ings at present. The demand is not at all brisk, as the outside markets show no great improyement. 3B lc ole ie e ofe oi ob ofeafe ade ofe ob oï¬ ofe oo e se ho ade oo abe ie abe ofe 92 oo T urRGy$.....;..:>..s+++++ Potatoes, per bag....... BEHNL, crssresissxrrsssseees Shorts Hides, per ewt.......... Calfskins, per lb........ Sheepskins............... Tallow rendered per lb Lard, perib.............. Beelf, per ewt...... THE LITTLE YELLOW LABEL Hay............... Dressed Hogs, per ewt Hogs, Live weight..... Butter, fresh roll per lb Putter, Tub.............. TELOUE,ss4112:. 11seissisk4i4 PYIDCRE::::»....1+.... Latibs............ DURHAM MARKETS. Telephone No 8. OGhe above Ftours WVarket. Having adoptea the Cash Sstem I beg to quoic Flour, &¢,, at the undermentioned prices, to my patrous and cash customers : At accounts past due must be promptly paid will be placed in other hands for coltlection. Give us a trial and be convinced that our prices are right. _ Above prices are strictly cash. _ Goods deliâ€" vered to all parts of the town. Ohe Peopte‘s Hjitts Pure Manitoba Flour per bbl... $4.20 Streug Bakers $ # 3.50 Family j 4* iz 4.10 9 00 5 8 25 40 9o 35 15 14 14 10 9 are egqual to any Flour on the 10 00 6 15 14 14 10 No 40 35 62 OFFICE FIRgT DOOR EAST CF the Duroam Pharmacy Calder‘s Block. Residence first door west of the old Post Office, Durham, y ARTHUR H. JACKSON CAPITAL, Authorized . ... . ..$2,000,000 CAPITAL, Paid up........ ... 1,000,000 RESERVE FUND ........... 600,000 AGENTS in all principal pomts in Ontario, â€" Quebec, Manitoba, United States and England. W. F. COWAN, President. GEO. P. REID, Manager. A general Banking business transacted Drafts issued and collections made on all points. Deposits received and interâ€" est allowed at exrrent rates, Srd Div, lot 7. con.1, E. G, R, Glenelg on Garafraxa Road convement to Durâ€" ham. This fifty acres is a snap at price asked. MONEY TO LOAN at 4 1â€"2 per cent «â€" and up‘according to security and terms. INSURANCES, COLLECTIONS and CONVEYANCING as well as other Financial business carefully attenâ€" ded to. SAVINGS BANk _ .aterest allowed on savings bank deposits of $1.00 and upâ€" wards â€" Prompt attention and every facility afforded customers living at a distance. J. G HUTTON, M. D., C. M. D.1IMcPHMHAIL..s# Lot 7, con. 3, Normanby, the ‘Feâ€"‘ farm, belong to a company, and is offerâ€" ed at low figures, I have a large number of other |lnmp- erties in town and country and will sell or trade. Lot 18, con, 14, Bentinek. n« » P. 0, â€" In hands, of a Company, place and must go to some one., The Hanover Conveyancer He has a big list of Property for Sale, including the following : Lot 28, Con. 2, W. G. R., Bentincek a splendid improved farm convenient to [;)ul ham. Very cheap, 64 acres near Alian Park on Durham Road. Splendid buildings, good land, will sell cheap or trade. Fortunes Member College Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario, OFFICE HOURS 9â€"12 «, m. 2â€"4 p. m . RESIDENCE and OFFICE â€"Ol4 Bank UPPFER TOWXN, DURHAM. CONVEYANCER, VALUATOR, uiz Insurance Agent, _ Pr. T. G. HOLT L. D. S. DURHAM AGENCY. DENTISTRY. NOTARY PUBLIC, COMMISSIONER, &c Telephone Connection No. 10 Head Office, Toronto. .â€"McKenzie‘s Old Stand â€" '6'3 OWAT. Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Grey. D. McPHAIL, Hopeville P. 0 C. RAMAGE Durham. MAY BE MADE By Dealing With . H. Miller, Private Money to _ Loan P J KELLY, Agent. Durham, Ont. Farms bought and sold Louise Fine ts 40 ty ® (f