West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 8 Aug 1901, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PRIOC SamPLE ANO T®Y vv, . cucmists, _ To eat enough; you are nefit of it. nulsion of codâ€"liver oil u digest your food, and ie plumpness of health, true of babies. t wll 0 20 TT evecne 11 be sold in one par al or e ind "Wierg rgain . P. 0. box 109, Winone, o0thing @ hould ab Pdnn"t.«-tl( l';‘le‘j 3‘ s‘-'-oth ¢ gums, cures m colig dy for diarrhoem, T wentyâ€" , Wias» is dow the llum i L n chi._red, ABs: t.@ oulh:r o. lour. Sh. j .sed ana. mairred a suvky ose cul 1 charm was a b ard. SmirtIng ud er th: colouc} det rmised the Bley ere _ all drug ments 1 ain Meyr e W nental Life ance Company mm vanhe iss l ts« â€" N?\m Peninsuia sb m Hamilon on two rail . 33 of whi b is in fruit n lall 0. S.ooky H t w, 1Â¥ oi J .sbi¢18f, it #Be Bd distreslog â€" C.FuMup 18 his ilest snave is .Q 1c Up ratlod sacrined ors wlhit Was UD. p.i.G » whole regiog. AD :.A. anti , NO JY ® Ni ars‘ Growlh Sucrifleed ~USS " has nof?nd; difâ€" an be worn cont uuon-lz. any position: when d r “"'f"'?""ll'! “P:'\.:N E‘s"* ‘end for Hiustr pamâ€" sentalives wanted. The amdon, Ont. R SALEâ€"ONE OF THE S IN HIS WHEEL, less you are J need more fat. house; ave}ui‘ovt;;ni; given; cireulars, ter n# Apply World P . blishing Dâ€"WE WaAaNr LaDY r new book, The Pertoct® lllustrated; a book that YOLu ‘S5 DROPS 0otch Remedy â€" 1got w t en n Dear 4 THE WM. PAYNE H rd _ s#> _ sup ctor awoetheart would turned ho dows, _ry brind of Rair i1 io the drug snâ€"‘ce d d b y« #d lpitions _ As nes h: became wmore t of adm ration, ed out of his d azain to ike toos to bi yeling mely prof ci 0t i race o1 w th & the entire coâ€"m to witness the tivco. B. Woods, neral Manager. for Catarrh that ty town, $1.00. Proprietor, "â€"trou,. Qn W 3 Colds, ote. 1y* cauâ€"ed be n‘s Drope will nd descripti y parking .3 | on receipt a ly tweonty New Yo k col 100 M We rn." and left an be cross. 1y the enas of NTO, _ v0)6) LU104¢ k r@arted, & hi«d bues eau her by 1 k+rs tied h Life Ionâ€" intce the to loans, ed insurâ€" d at our + sc HMM€ at w is t ko : hlood and iying Hall‘e mnu no. 1t i# o, Orio, by list rict, 1901 +d4, on 1 °: "@L ~r was me! to secr %. nshtze bo su rfaces, xcept om h od yeu ‘atarrh had ung her, ()= Washington reportâ€" in this dis course Dr. Talimage shows that there bs a tendency to excuse brilliant faults because they are brill:ant, when the same law of right and wrong ought to be applied to high places and low. Text, Daniel iv, 33: "The same hour was the thing fulfilled upon Nebuchadâ€" meszar, and he was driven from men and did eat grass as oxen." Here is the mightiest of the Babyâ€" lonish kings. Look at him. He did more for the grandeur of the capital tham did all his predecessors or sucâ€" wessors. Hanging gardens, reservoirs, Aqueducts, palaces, all of his own planâ€" ning. The bricks that are brought up toâ€"day from the ruins of Babylon have hts name on them, "Nebuchadnezzar, son ef Nabopolassor, king of Babyâ€" lon." He was a great conqueror. He streiched forth his spear toward a naâ€" tion, and it surrendered. But he plurâ€" dered the temple of the true God. He Ufted an idol, Bel Merodach, and comâ€" Welied the people to bow down before 4. and if they refused they must go through the redhot furnace or be erunched by lion or lioness. So God pulled him down. He was smitten with what physiâ€" clans call lycanthropy and fancied that he was a wild beast, and he went out and pastured amid the cattie God did not excuse him because he had comâ€" mitied the sin in tbigh places or beâ€" cause the transgression was wide reâ€" sounding. He measured Nebuchadâ€" nessar in high places just as He would measure the humblest captive. But in our time, you know as well . as I that there is a disposition to put | a hale sround iniquity if it is commlt-i ted in conspicuous place and if it ls‘ wide resounding and of large proporâ€" | tions. Ever and anon ‘h:â€"e has been | &n epidemic of crime in hisy : places,‘ and there is not & state or city and‘ hardly a village which has not been called to look upon astounding forgeryi or an absconding bank cashier or presâ€" | Ident or the wasting of trust fund or | swindling mortgages. I propose In. carrying out the suggestion of my text, | as far as I can, to scatter the fascinaâ€" . tions around iniquity and show you | that sin is sin~ and wrong is wrmg| whether in high place or low place,i and that it will be dealt with by God who dealt with impalaced Nebuchadâ€" nezzar. j AM who preack feel that two kinds of sermons are necessary, the one on the faith of the gospel, the other on the morality of the gospel, and the one is just as important as the other, for you know that in this land toâ€"day there are hundreds o% men hiding beâ€" hbind the communion tables and in churches of Jesus Christ who have no business to be there as professors of religion. They expect to be all right with God, although they are all wrong with man. And, while I want you to understand that by the deeds of the Jlaw no flesh living can be justified and a mere honest life cannot enter us into heaven, I want you as plamly to unâ€" derstand that unless the life is right the bheart is not right,. Grace in the heart and grace in the life; so we must preach sometimes the faith of the gosâ€" pel and sometimes the morality of the It seems to me there has not been a time in the last fifty years when this latter truth needed more thoroughly to be presented in the American churchâ€" es than it needs to be presented toâ€"day. Now, look abroad and see the fas-l cinations that are thrown around ditâ€" ferent styles of crime,.> The question tha; every man and woman has been asked has been, Should crime be exâ€" eused because it is on a iarge scale? Is iniquity gullty and to be pursued of the law in proportion as it is on a small scale? Shall we have the peniâ€" teniiary for the man who steals an evereoat from a hatrack and all Canâ€" ada for a man to range in if he has robbed the public of millions? Look upon all the fascinations thrown @round fraud in this country. You know for years men have been made heroes of and pictorialised and in varâ€" fous ways presented to the public as though sometimes they were worthy of admiration if they have scattered the funds of banks or swallowed great estates that did not belong to thom. Our young men have been dazed with this quick accumulation. They have said: "That‘s the way to do it. What‘s the use of cur plodding on with small wazes or insigrificant salary when we miy go Into business life and with PW iges o STVO OE /C fuctory or the stors. he has more money than be ever had, trades off his old st‘ver watch for a gold one with a fiashing chain, sets his hat a little furâ€" ther over on the 1e of his head than he ever did. smo‘res better cigars and more of them. He has his hand in! Now, if he can escane the penitentiary far +hree or four vears® he will get Into political circles, and ae will get poâ€" Hitical jJohs and will have something to ao with harbors and pavements and Padrnet. . Th L3"m 4 <7 n en 2 | _ _Oh, there is such a fearful fascinaâ€" | tion in this day about the use of trust funds. It has got to be popular to take the funds of others and specuâ€" | late with them. There are many who aroe practicing that iniquity. Almost every man in the course of his life has the property of others put in his ‘ care. _ He has administered, perhaps, | for a dead friend; he is an attorney, i and money passes from debtor to ! creditor through his bands; or he is : in a commercial establishment and ; gets a salary for the discharge of his | responsibilities; or he is treasurer of ! a philanthropic inst!tution, and money lfor the suffering goes through his +‘ hands; or he has some office in city or state or nation, and < taxes and subsidies and supplies and salaries are in his hands. Now, that is a trust. That is as sacred a trust as \ God can give a man. It is the conâ€" ; centration of confidence. Now, when _that man takes that money, the | money of others, and goes to specuâ€" lating with it for his own purposes, he is guilty of theft, falschood and | perjury and in the most intense sense . of the word is a miscreant. It is quite a long road sometimes for a man to travel before he gets into the romance of crime. Those are caught who are only in the prosaic stage of it. If the sheriffs and conâ€" stables would only leave them alone a little while they would steal as well as anybody. They might not be able to steal a whole railroad, but they could master a load of pig iron. s Now, I always thank God when I find an estate like that go to smash. It is plague struck, and it blasts the nation. I thank God when it goes into such a wreck it can never be gathered up again. I want it to beâ€" come so loathsome and such an inâ€" sufferable stench that honest young men will take warning. If God should put into money or its representative the capacity to go to its lawful owner, there would not be a bank or a safeâ€" ty deposit in the United States whose walls would not be blown out and mortgages would rip and parchments would rend and gold would shoot and beggars would get on horseback and stock gamblers would go to the almesâ€" house. How many dishonesties in the makâ€" ing out of involces and in the plasâ€" tering of false labels and in the filching of customers of rival houses and i n the making and breaking of contracts! â€" Young men are indoctrinâ€" ated in the idea that the sooner they get money the better, and the etting of it on a larger scale only proves to them their greater ingenâ€" uity. There is a glitter thrown around about all these things. Young men have got to find out that God looks upon sin in a very different light. docks. Now he has got so far along he is safe for perdition. _ There are families toâ€"dayâ€"widows _and orphansâ€"with nothing between ’them and starvation but a sewing machine, or kept out of the vortex ! by the thread of a needle red with : the blood of their hearts, who were by father or husband left a competenâ€" cy. You read the story in the newsâ€" | paper of those who have lost by a bank defalcation, and it is only one line, the name of a woman you never heard of, and just one or two figures l telling the amount of stock she had, ; the number of shares. It is a very < short line in a newspaper, but it is a line of agony long as time; it is a story | long as eternity. And remember that the man who gets his gain by iniquity will soon tose it all. One moment after his deâ€" parture from life he will not own an opera house, he will not own a cerâ€" tificate of stock, he will not own one dollar of government securities, and the poorest boy that stands on the street with a penny in his pocket, looking at the funeral procession of the dead cheat as it goos by will have more money than that man who one week previous boasted that he conâ€" trol‘«d the money market. Now, do now come under the fascinaâ€" tion which induces men to employ trust funds for purposes of their own «peculation. Cultivate oldâ€"fashioned honesty. Remember the example of Wellington, who, when he was leading the British army over tne French fronâ€" tier and his army was very hungry and there was plenty of plunder on the Fronch frontier and some of the mea wanted to take it, said: ‘"Soldiere, do not touch that. God will take care of us. He will take care of the English army. Plenty of plunder, I know, all around, but do not take it." He told the story afterward himeelf, how that the French people brought to him their valuables to keepâ€"he supâ€" posed to be their enemyâ€"brought him their valuables to keep, and then, he said, at a time when the creditors of the army were calling for money and for pay all the time and they had e0 much all around about, he did not feel It right for him to take it or for the army to take it. An â€" author beautifully wrote in regard to it: "Nothing can be grander or more noble and original than this admisâ€" sion. This old «oldier, after thirty years of service, this iron man and victorious general, established in an enemy‘s country, at the head of an immen«> army, is afraid of his crot_!lt- ore. Tlis is a kind of fear that has seldom troubled conquerors and vicâ€" tors, and I doubt if the annals of war present anything comparable to this sublime eimplicity." C Oh, that God would ecatter these fascinations about fraud and let. us all understand that if I steal from you $1 I am a thief, and if I steal from you $500,000 I am 500,000 times more of a thief! m 0y‘ i So thers has been a great deal of fascination thrown around libertiniem. Society is very severe upon the impurity that lurks _round the @lâ€" leys and low haunts of the town. The law pursues it, smites it, incarcerâ€" ates It, tries to destroy it, â€" You «know as well as I that society beâ€" comes lenient in proportin as imâ€" purity becomes affuent or is in eleâ€" vated circles, and finally societv is ailent or disposed to palliate. Where is the judge. the jury, the police officer that dare arraign the wealthy w rides the parks, he flaunts his inâ€" iquity in the eyes of the pure. The hag> of uncleanliness looks out of the tapestried window. Where is the law that dares take the brazen wretches and put their faces in an iron frame of a state prison window? libertine? He walks the etreets, he Then look at the fascinations | _ _ _ ; _ _ . g.ean. thesoe th are in al communities men who have | â€"The fact that immediate.y after the taken the lives of Others unlawfully | battle with the kings th.re came anDâ€" not : . other vision from GJdi to Abram leads as executioners of the law, and ; ! us to think that he may have been they go scot free. You say they had th s d their provocations. God gave life, I “'h"m‘ h ugh : t“‘efi‘t;m- and HJ alone has a right to take it | peomInc. To a visionâ€"Whnich sup and He may take it by visitation of | Abram awake, and oowe visine ap. Providence or by an executioner Of | pearance, or sensible token of the the law who is His messenger. But | presence of the diivine glory.â€"Henry. when a man assumes that divine preâ€" ‘ Fear notâ€"Fear not thy enemies, rogative he touches the lowest depth neither fear lest My promises shall of crime. | fall thee. I am thy shieldâ€"‘God was Bociety is alert for certain kinds | Abram‘s portion, and He is the porâ€" of murder. â€"If a citizen going along | tion of every righteous sou!.‘" Great the road at night is waylaid and Frewardâ€""Tay reward shall be exceedâ€" slain by a robber, we all want the | ing great." ‘"Taere is surely a referâ€" villain arrested and executed. For | ence bere to the battle and the vicâ€" all garroting, for all beating out Of | tory. I shielded thee in the batth life by a club or an ax or a élungâ€" | and rewarded thee in the victory.‘ shot, the law has quick spring and | â€"Candlish, When G>d is ours we have heavy stroke; but you know that | all thxat guauhlcl »nt {gr ?ef:nce a,ndl «4 reward ; 3 promise involves eterna ::'B:n men ggt affluent and high PO#!â€" ; jife. â€"Murphy. hnX / ahas ~ausmes thals WHAWRET s ecc TaBlrmyls Mistne I am aevine shot, the law has quick spring and heavy stroke; but you know that when men get affluent and high posiâ€" tion and they avenge their wrongs by taking the lives of others, great sympathy is excited, lawyers plead, ladies weep, judge halts, jury is bribed and the man goes free. If the verdict happens to be against him, a new trial is called on through some technicality, and they adjourn for witnegses that never come, and adâ€" journ and adjourn until the commuâ€" nity has forgotten all about it, and then the prison door opens and the murderer goes free. Now, if capital punishment is right, I say let the life of the polished murderer go with the life of the vulgar assassin. Let us have no partiality of gallows, no aristocracy of electrocution chair. Do not let us float back to barbarism, when every man was his own judge, jury and executioner, and that man had the supremacy who had the sharpest knife and the strongest arm and the quickest step and the stealthiest revenge. He who wilfully and in hatred takes the lite of another is a i murderer, I care not what the provoâ€" cation or the circumstances. He may be cheered by an enthusiastic courtâ€" room, he may be sent by the govâ€" ernment of the United States as minâ€" |tster to some foreign court, or modâ€" \ ern literature may polish the crime , until it looks like heroism; but in !the sight of God murder is murder, and the judgment day will so reveal it. There are hundreds of young men who have good blood. Shall I ask three or four plain questions? Are your habits as good as when you left your father‘s house? Have you a pool ticket in your pocket? Have you a fraudulent document? Have you been experimenting to see how accurate an imitation you could make of your empldyer‘s signature? Oh, you have good blood. Remember your father‘s prayers. Remember your mother‘s example. Turn not in an evil way. Have you been going astray? Come back. Have you ventured out too far? As I stand in puipits looking over audiences sometimes my heart fails me. There are so many tragedies preâ€" sent, so many who have sacrificed their integrity, so many far away from God. Why, my brother, there have been too many prayers offered for you to have you go overboard. And there are those venturing down intc sin, and my heart aches to call them back. "Oh," you say, "you don‘t know where I came from; you don‘t know what my history has been you don‘t know what iniquity I have plotted. I have gone through the whole cataâ€" logue of sin.‘" My brother, I do not know the story, but I tell yau this â€"the door of mercy is wide open. "Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shail be as wool." Though you have been polluted with the worst of crimes, though you have been smitten with the worst of leproâ€" sies, though you have been fired with all evil passions, this moment on your brow, hot with iniquitous indulgence, may be set the flashing coronet of a Saviour‘s turgiveness, Pleased with the news, the saints beâ€" In songs their tongues employ; Beyond the sky the tidings g*, And heaven is filled with joy. Nor angels can their joy contain, But kindle with new fire; The sinner lost, is found.they sing, And strike the sounding lyre. EBENEZER AND HIS DOG. 48 m wWHERE‘S THE DOG? God‘s Promise to Abraham.â€"Gen. 15:; 118. ts SUNDAY SCEOOL Commentary.â€"1. After these things â€"The fact that immediate.y after the battle with the kings th.re came anâ€" other vision from GJi to Abram leads us to think that he may have been passing through a teat..g time, and perhaps he was tempted to discourâ€" UWTERNATIONAL LKESSUN NO. AUGUST 11, 1901. Afi.mnt. In a visionâ€"Wahich supposes Abram awake, and some visible apâ€" pearance, or sensible token of the presence of the diivine glory.â€"Henry. 2 Lgo childlessâ€"Sweing I am gcing childless ; that is, L am going out of the world in this condition.â€"Hom. Com. Abram desired a son, for he knew upon divine authority that his seed shoul inherit the land. Sonship and heirship are inseparably conâ€" nected in the thoughts of G»1.â€"C. H. M. Bteward of my houseâ€"The heir into whose hands Abâ€"am s possessions must descend in consequence of his childless condition.â€"Leale. Is3s this Eliezerâ€""How could the promise be fullilled when a ‘stranger‘ is likely to be his heir ?" * o 8. Given no seedâ€" â€"‘"Though we shoald never complain of God, yet we may complain to H‘m, and tell Him all our grievances." One born in my houseâ€"That is. "one attached to, or a denendent of his hause." o 11. Cam»e dow n»â€"Having made ready | the sacri ices, he waited for the fire : of God to consume thom, which wu.sl the usual tokon ol acceptance.} Whi‘e he waited raveszous birds of ; prey whith feed upon dead bodies j "came down" to consume the wacriâ€" | fice. ‘ | 12. Was going downâ€"About the time of the evening sacrilice. A deep | | sleepâ€"Not a common sle>op through | | wearkness or careb>msness, but such a sleep as God caused to fall upon Adam.â€"Henry. Gr at darkness â€" . "Which God designed to be expresâ€" ‘sive of‘the aff:istior and misery into which hi= posterity shou‘d be brought during their bonage in Egypt, as the next verss particu‘arly states." 13. Shall afflict themâ€"From the no I‘mit to the power of God, for he who can quvicken the dead can do anything. _ _ C Topeoghn fiola : 100 5 Look......tell the staraâ€""The starse in that climate are brighter than in ours. Prof, Haill says he has known Vonus to sh‘n> so bright as to cust a shadow. So shall thy seed beâ€"The de.cendants of Abraham inâ€" claded rot only Isracelites; but the Arablans the Milian.tes, the Amâ€" monites anl Moabites were a nuâ€" merous pe ple, and were (or more thin a thousanl ycars among the most important in Asia. _ > 6 Bel evel in the Lordâ€"*"God speaks â€"abram b.li>â€"ves and all is settled ani all is sure." Abram believed the truth 0o: the promise that was now made h‘m, resting upon the p woer 1n | f.i.h uinss of G>d who had made it. See Rom. Iv. i9â€"21. Câ€"unted it â€""Thore was no act but that of th> mirl and heart, no work of any k n1i; honce the doctrine of justiâ€" ficition by faith, without any mer.t of works ; jor in thi. eas> th ra could be no works of Abram which would merit the salvation of the whole human race." For righteousnessâ€"Or justification.â€"Clarke. & 7. I t m th» Lordâ€"The promies of Gol are very broad, very high, and very long. 8. Whoreby shall I knowâ€"That is, "by whit sizgn hal I be aceusced that I +hall inherit lJand." _ _ _ y 9 Take me an heifer, ete.â€"The aniâ€" male prescrib»d are of the three kinds afterwards allowed by the law for sacrifice ; and the birds are those reâ€" peated:.y mentioned in the law as those to be brought for offerings. 4. Shall not be thine heirâ€"There is 10 He took....all theseâ€"Abram folâ€" lowed to the very letter the direcâ€" tions God had given him ; so we must obey God fully before we can have reason to expect Him to fulfil His promises to us. Diâ€"iied them, etc.â€" The mammer of ra.ilying a covenant was to divide the auimals lengthwise, as near as pussible in two cqual parts, which were placed opposite to each other a short distaw«ce apart ; the covenanting parties would then meet in the centre and take the customary oa‘th. _ _ ie rolphcas in in .ws w Te y e sA ie s 1P oo time God called Abram at Haran it was 430 years before Abrain‘s desâ€" cendants came into . possession of their own land ; but the Children of Israel were actually in Egpyt only half that time, or 215 years. 14. That nationâ€"The Egyptian nation. Will I judgeâ€"God brought agues and destruction upon the E‘,’u‘u. Come outâ€"Israel wasreâ€" deemed from bondage and came oul of Egypt with great wealth. This promige was literally fuil lled, but there was & long time of wait ng. 15. In rtceâ€"“Thle verse strongly implies the .mmortality of the soul." 16. Amoritesâ€"This was the general name for the Canaanitish tr bes.â€" Hom. Com. Iniquity ...... not yet fuil ONTAR! â€"*"From these words we learn that there is a certain ptch of iniquity to which nations may arr.ve beâ€" fore they are destroyed, and beâ€" yond which God will not permt thrm to pase." _ s § 17. A smoking furnaceâ€"This s‘gaiâ€" fied the aifl.ict on of the children of Israel in Egypt. "They were thore in the furnace of afflict on." Burnâ€" ing lampâ€"The rymbol of the div ne presence. "Faith may be strong, but lxiht com while we stand beâ€" fore the Lord, by the holy aitar of burnt offering." 18. Mado a covenantâ€"A covenant is a mutual agreement between two contracting parties, each . of which is bound to fulli certain enâ€" gagcments to the other. In Hoy Gcripture it is used mostly o deâ€" note certain defined relat ons beâ€" tween God and man. Rivep of Egypt â€"Probably the River Nile. Thoughtsâ€"Incidental â€" features of the covenant: 1. It was of God‘s own making. 2. It was an estabâ€" lished covenant. 3. It was an enâ€" tailed covenant. 4. It wase an everâ€" lasting covenant. From everlasting Tho Lord communicates with men. A darge part of the scriptures is stated as being what God said. Those who scout the iJea of man s receising messages and communications from God riject not only the sacred reâ€" cord, but the experiences of men toâ€" day. Ia this lessoa are seven uistinet utterances of God to His faithful servant. p in the counsels of it and to everâ€" lasting in the consequences of it. â€"A,. W. Parry. PRACTICAL SURVEY. God‘s promises to Abram. God proâ€" mised H‘meif to Absam to be his "exceeding gseat reward.‘ Tais came to him perhaps at a critical tim» in his life. He had defeated his enemics, and possibly he thoucht that he must fight hi; way cloac th o gh and thore mizht be a temptation to ciscourageâ€" ment; but, jast at the right time, God‘s time, that volce said, "Fear cot." Abram‘e faith. _ Abram knew cerâ€" tiinly that the Lord had given His word to him. It was no mere impresâ€" sion of a dreamcr However greatly he desired a son h> took no simple desire as a basis for the Tullllment of that desire. Knom~iig <hait God had spoken, he placed the fullest confiâ€" dene» in what H> eaid. Hoere is a perâ€" fect iNustrati n of Paul‘s defici im of faith, "the svbhstance of things hoped for. the evidone>» of things not seen." N) far as Abram could see there wase nothing to indicate how God‘e promise would be ful i ed. _ In thoe natural course of events he must go down to ‘is grave chidless, but he had a faith that grasp=d the unâ€" se‘ n We do not rerd that ho had to etr in hbimsel‘ mentally to bel‘eve, but he knew the Lord, and knew (hat H>+> had given the promise to him, henec» he rested upin that word. Mountring of diffeulty must vanish when the frlfilment of God‘e word to one of His believing ones requires it. Economic Value of Diffterent Varileâ€" ties Determined. The Ontario Departmnt of Agriâ€" cu.vure has issued a buidletin upon th»> comparative valu s of Oitaclo whrats for brea |â€"makng purposâ€"s, with notes on varietiâ€"s of winter wh ats. The> bu‘:l tia embo is the re-l su.t of tha labors of Prof. R. _ Harâ€" court, B. S. A., associate profeseor‘ of ch m‘st y, and Mr. C. A. Zavit:;, B. S. A., expermntalist of th»e & l~\ lege. A s>ries of extensive experiâ€" m nts have bâ€"en con u ted by Prof.. Harcourt to ascertali th»> «conomic values of the different varietis of whâ€"at in the pro%ustion of bread. Th s> (xp rm nts weee on er &ken b cause of th miny complaints {rom bo h farm»rs anl m lers rogar i~g thr poor qual‘ty of the flour maljle from ‘Ontarisa grown whent, which resu‘ted1 in th> flour b ing a drug on the market, which cou!! enly > eold by un?erbiiding competitors. Alter mak ng trets from flour g~own on the colage farm it was determined to broamien the scop»> ol (nvestiration, an1i thirtyâ€"~ix tonâ€"buchel _ sample lots, consisting of ten varieties of owintor wlhrat and\t fise of epring wheat grown in Ontario. wers coll»eted from var‘ons pxints in the Province. and eublected to the test. One samnle of Taorkey Red war also importrd from Kansas, two ramn‘e lots of the same _ variety having also been obtained _ from Watrrioo. The grain was grornd, the four tested for gluten, percentâ€" age of water abeorption. etc., and ten and fifteen pound lots of fMlour oftne_ diff>pent â€" varieties . were mad> into bread aml baked indeâ€" p>ndenlly hy two of the most exâ€" prrienceed bakers in Guelph to deâ€" tormine the yie‘d of bread. When thrir reeu‘ts dil not agree closely a third trial was made, and the bread was then scored on the basis of 100 pounds for idea‘ bread. ‘The results indivate genera‘ly that the hravier th>: wheat per measured bushe! the better the quality of the flonp. but soil and smason undoubtâ€" lrdly have a very morke1 infuence on the weight p»r bushel, and aiso on the quality of floup. Glaten,. it is found. varies in quality.. that which is firm and hard absoâ€"bing mor~ water and giving a larger yicld of broead than that which is lmft and sticky. The g‘uten of the Turk:y Rod wheat is reported of a better quality than that of the | Michigan â€" AmÂ¥er, and _ Dawson‘s Go‘d»â€"n Chaf! than that of the ‘Fnr'y Rod Clawson. The final test \of the quality of the different Nour® lin the yield and qaality of bread | produced gave the following reâ€" Turkey foott .. _}0 .~ Miâ€"hizan sults : ONTARIOâ€"GROWN WHEAT. TORONTO KFall Wheats. Yield of bread quality per 10 Ihs. pofl"":'h- 157 6 148.3 1179 eay A verniro 05 00 3000 Genesse Glant ... ... Jon»s‘ Winter Fife Wa ke:‘s Roli hi. Tiiamond Grit .. .. Manchester ... .. .. Ea ly Red Clawson Dakwson‘s Golden FHCG... 1« «o s soum White Rueswian ... Thirkset ... .. .. He:i on Bearded ... IUU) ANEMEULY:+» axs ce ars Ass Followhnig ars tThe closing quota~ 3!:!1& at imporiant wheat centres toâ€" y i k C md New York ... ... ... ... $â€"â€" #0 73 34 CRIODEO se se aee seanee * 0 68 3â€"8 "POIOUGK mss ser inss ase m APABD 0 69 1â€"4 Dul th, No. 1 nor. 068 84 067384 Duluthn, No, 1 bard 0 70 34 â€"â€" Toronto Harmers‘ s4arket. Aug. 3.â€"The street market here ros4 sumed its normal qui«iness to«<lay, and the deliveries of produce fell off About 900 bushe‘ls of grain were reâ€" celived, and hay and straw wore fairly plentilul, Other laes were q 1A and tnere was little demand. lDrices are gonâ€"raily steady and unchangod. Wheatâ€"Une load of white soild 1<. € hizher at 70c ani 150 bushels of roose Jâ€"2 to lt highor at 68 iâ€"3 io _ unatsâ€"Seven hundred bushols sold 1â€""¢ lower at (0:. Haiy and EKtrawâ€"Hay wase offered freely and prices were unchanged ; 25 loads sold at $12 to $13 p>»r toa for old and {8 to $9 for new. Straw was easgier, five loads selling 50¢ lower at $0 to $10 per ton. 1 Vvegoetablesâ€"New potatoes are «sill very scarse and few loads are olfored Large 1. ts soll at $1 to $1.15 por bushel, and at retall they sol a%t 38 (tl') 40¢ per peck. Old are practically one. Toronto Freuit Market The local market continues active with a gosd domand and h.avy mupâ€" plies. Toâ€"day‘s _ olierings w ro about 6000 packages, and they were sonh +0ld. Raspberries _ were scarce and pilces were firmer; red rold at 7% to 10:; and Ulack at 99 t0 i0: â€" Lawtlon berrics were scaree at :103 to 1%e. Tomatoos were ca i ®, selliug at 60 to £0;, while huckle borrics were firmer at 903 to &L, Oth»r fruits were quiet and steady, We cuâ€"te: Binanas, p»r bunch, $1.50 to $2; cherrtl»s, per basket, 90: to $1.25; currants â€" black, per bas ket, $1 to #1.25; currants, red, per â€"Dressed Mogsâ€"Market quict and pric» unchanged at $9.25 to $9.78 per ow t. t basket, 40: to 60c ; huckleberricg per baiket, 90¢ to $1.10. Porouto tive Stuoca Markets, Export cattie, choice, por owu #1 M w$ & EOMOULANL.scasxrers 1x »«++++ â€" & Nb Q :A KXDOrL COWs ................... 878 to + Burchers‘ cartle picked........ 4 40 o 4 Butchers‘ cattle, chorce......... 190 to 4 Butchers‘ cattie, fair............ 8 50 to 4 GB RONNRON.... «s + +«+«++«. 200 to â€" B D BOWBL: 21 asers ssesarassces BHO ho â€" 8 ME DNE x xxx xn ar e nxeraes ~ PHO td . M Bulls, export. heavy, percowL.. 3 To to 4 Bulle, export. ligbt. per owl.... 3 M to 3 Fesders, shortâ€"keep ...... ..... 4 # to 4 io. rmotiune..... ..â€"â€"..»...... $00 ko MOMQ Eyc ) ) cÂ¥ S ixserrrareess â€" EME Hib BStockers, 404 to 600 Ibs........... 300 to ; ©ilâ€"colors und heifere......... 2 & to 3 Milch cows, each . »veewe wee | HEE O thio M Sheep. owes per ewb. ........ 3 40 to 3 E'HWIJ.'.'..TITZIIIIIIIII zug to :Q sifiD, by OWD . s 2 se s e eae+ d nug-.ugt. ;:om.............. 07'5 Lo 05 SOWB, PEL CWL.......»»ssseescs»»s 40 40 4 English Live Stock Markets Lomion, Auz. 3.â€"Prices hore amd in Liverool ure weaker at {from 14 t0 l2 1â€"4¢ per lb. wirew.@4 WokAglht) , reirigurator beel is sediog at 8 34 to UÂ¥ jâ€"46 per lb. ECEOmak CBP PPBE POEEnen eeh T P P in new Ostario, is unusually brisk just cow, honse the diffi u.ty of drawâ€"» ing men away to Manitoba. But it would be an awful pity to see any of the gool wheat wast d because, as the hymnâ€"book says, "the hary st is grcoat and the laborers few." The condition seems to indicat» that 1% wi‘l not be safe to diopnd upon the all of an unâ€"mployed, floating popw lation to take care of th> North w eat harvest. Ther» must be a larser res!â€" dent poru ation, or th» fa:m rs must go in for som» kinl of farming that is not "all wheat." Mon in th» ol ‘er Provinces who have st adly jobs canâ€" not afford to dgrop thom for a few weeks to earn goo!l wag»s in Mank toba and help the farmrs of that Province out of a hole. In hard tim ®, the supply of lab»r m~y b* ample, but the big Maritoba harvost is one of the things that ko ops har" times away. More of the dâ€"ep s»d Ga‘ll 4ans an | DPonkhobo»s wonu‘d b» very wl rome in Manitoba and the Territorice just now. 4 luwa one 0| ue e e e w ced say that practically all the freight carried by the fast American line steamers from New York to Bouthâ€" ampton comiits of Canadian bacom. This is not bowoeve», due to the superâ€" lior speed of Am»rican vessels, but to the superior dock arrangements a%s Southampton _by which _ Canadlas bracon. which is cured lish*tly and so has to be placed on th» market with» out delay Is ranliiy hand‘ed. Delays necur at both London and Liverpop! in the unloading. Matthow‘s Fast Steamers Leading Wheat Markets. THE BACON LOU °E. Bpring Wheat . Pork rs Take Cauadian Pork t on t hn t ©00 . * Cash. Bept. «. &â€"â€" #0 73 34 ies _ y 0 68 3â€"8 m 1#3 0 69 1â€"4 r. O 68 84 06734 d 0O 70 34 â€"â€" lab»r me~y be ample, ritoba harvest is one hat keops har‘d times the dâ€"ep a»d Ga‘ll uns 1€ Packing Co>., of Otâ€" Ja â€"ge .t In Cnunada, illy all the frelgll@ 147. #¢ 116.1 @1 14 7 . +0 145.1 â€" 15 141.5 B5 1438.2 15 1410 ; 81. 148 6 140 6 140.5 140.1 weck eds 2l Crup T1ML RO 15 bhes

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy