mount of flesh is paith; if youh* u can get it by he ounce produces . seems to start the hinery going he patient ispn ibsorb his ordinary e could not do beâ€" the way the gain ist as uscful in summer you are thriving upon : the weather is warm, NO 36 1901, S WANS lexion h is in fruik NE OF THE ‘eninsula, â€" as hould al. :‘hsooo- s wind colis ® a. Twentyâ€" e been known to a day scomy u$ range, but it often I‘h . tqwnship of an s Springs, peat land, or With“m‘n parate or emeford, Ont. ED i Life Company A Y OLGIS . Winous, To Flesh, Do L COUX id v Using the ews m pere ong. t wo Canada y i n Ca grees . adverâ€" hout the ant ad," columns, is essonâ€" wepaper ‘=. Eack resented gh the Niagara @ry lat= 0 ay . MJ in npted CGiod‘e . Sabâ€" Conâ€" rtume ue of uses bhe byi} Ye, hur heâ€" d the he TN= ;â€â€˜â€œ"“’" & MWWM Woman always has voted and aiâ€" ways will vote. Our greatâ€"grandâ€" fathers thought they were by their votes putting Washington into the presidential chair. No. His mother, by the principles she *aught him and the habits she inculcated, made him president. 1t was a Christian mother‘s hand dropping the ballot when Lord Bacon â€" wrote, and ~Newton philosoâ€" phised, and Alfred the Great governed, and Jonathan Edwards thundered of judgment to come. How many men there have been in high political staâ€" tion who would have been insufficient to stand the test to which their moral principle was put had it not been for a wife‘s voice that encouraged them to do right and a wife‘s prayer that sounded lo:â€":ijer thar the clamor of parâ€" I know there are women of most unâ€" desirable nature who wander up and down the country, having no homes of their own or forsaking their own homes, talking about their rights, and we know very well that they themâ€" selves are fit neither to vote nor fit to keep house. Their mission seems to be to humiliate the two sexes at the thought of what any one of us might become. No one would want to live under the laws that such women would enact, or to have cast upon society the children that such women would raise. But I will show you that the best rights that woman can own she already has in her possession; that her position in this couniry at this time is not one of commiseration, but one of congratuâ€" lation; that the grandeur and power of her realm have never yet been appreâ€" clated; that she sits toâ€"day on a throne so high that all the thrones of earth piled on top of each other would not. make for her a footstool. Here is the ‘ platform on which she stands. Awty‘ down below it are the ballot box and the congressional assembly and the legislative hall. | My theory is that i?f woman wants to vote she ought to vote and that if a man wants to embroider and keep house he ought to be allowed to embroider and keep house. There are masculine women and there are effeminate men. My theory is that you have no right to interfere with any one‘s doing anything that is righteous. Albany and Washington might as well decree by legislation how high a brown thrasner should fly or how deep a trout should »lunge as to try to seek out the beight or the depth of woman‘s duty. The question of capacity will wmettle finally the whole question, the whole esubject. When a woman is prepared to preach, she will preach, and neither conference nor presbyâ€" tery can hinder her. When a woman is prepared to move in highest comâ€" mercial spheres, she will have great influence on the exchange and no boards of trade can hinder her. I want woman to understand that heart and brain can overflow any barrier that politicians may set up and that nothing can keep her back or keep her down ‘ut the question of capacity. 4 the hemispheres there was room still left to marshal the hosts of heaâ€" ven and set up the throne of the eternal Jehovah. I deny to man the throne intellectual. I deny to woâ€" man the throne affectional. No huâ€" man phraseology will ever define the spheres while there is an intuition by which we know when a man is in his realm and when a woman is in her realm and when either of them is out of it. No bungling legislature ought to attempt to make a definition or to say, ‘"This is the line, and that is the line." \ on my desk the swarthy, iron typed, thunderbolted _ writings of Harriet Martineau and Elizabeth Browning and (George Eliot. You come on with your stereotyped remark about woman‘s superiority to man in the item of affection, but I ask you where was there more capacity to love than in John the disciple, and Robert McCheyne, the Scotchman, and John Summerfleld, the Methoâ€" dist, and Henry Martyn, the missionâ€" ary? The heart of those men was so large that after you had rolled into SALADA ==m. You come out with your stereotyped remark that, man is superior to woman in intellect, and then I open a scale so delicate that he can weigh the dust of diamonds, but where are the scales so delicate that you can weigh them in affection, sentiment against sentiment, thought against thought, soul against soul, a man‘s word against a woman‘s word? In other words, God, who _ can make no mistake, made man â€"and woman for a specific work and to move in particular epheresâ€"man to be regnant in his realm, woman to be dominant in hers. The boundary idine between Italy and Switzerland, between England and Scotland, is not more thoroughly marked than this distinction between the empire masculine and the empire feminine. So entirely dissimilar are the fields to which God called them that you can no more compare them than you *an oxygen and hydrogen, water and grass, trees and stars. All this talk about the superiority of one sex to the other is an everlasting waste of ink and speech. A jeweler may have + ! Resembles CEYLON AND INDIA This Is the Chief Field of Usefulness For the Gentâ€" Woman and the Home ler Sex, Says Talmage “«omm“mmmoomomomm NATURAL LEAF GREEN abore facts. ibles Japan in flavor, in quality. It is mal use Ceylon Teas are sold in Sealed Lead Packets only. Black, Mixed, Uncolored Ceylon Green Free samples sent. Address "Salada,‘" Toronte | _ When you want to get your grandâ€" est idea of a queen, you do not think of Catherine of Russia, or of Anne of | England, or Maria Theresa of Austria, | but when you want to get your grandâ€" est idea of a queen you think of the plain woman who sat opposite your father at the table, or walked with him arm in arm down life‘s pathway, sometimes to the thanksgiving banâ€" quet, sometimes to the grave, but alâ€" ways togetherâ€"soothing your petty griefs, correcting your childish wayâ€" wardness, joining in your infantile sports, listening to your evening prayâ€" ers, toiling for you with noedle, or at the spinning whebl and on cold nights wrapping you up snug and warm. Andâ€" then at last, on that day when she lay in the back room dying, and you saw her take those thin hands with which she toiled for you so long and put them together in a dying prayer that commended you to God, whom she had taught you to trustâ€"oh, she was the queen! The chariots of God came down to fetch her, and as she went in @ll heaven rose up. You cannot think of her now without a rush of tenderâ€" ness that stirs the deep foundations of your soul, and you feel as much a child again as when you cried on her lap, and if you could bring her back again to speak just once more your never lose her throne, and death itself will only be the annexation of heavenâ€" principalities. What right does woman want that is grander than to be queen in such a realm? _ Why, the eag.s3 of heaven cannot fly across that dominion. Horses, panting and with lathered fanks, are not swift enough to run to the outpost of that reaim. They say that the sun never sets upon the Engâ€" lish empire, but I have to tell you that on this realim of woman‘s influence eternity never marks any bound. Isaâ€" bella fled from â€" the Spanish throne pursued by the nation‘s anathema, but she who is a queen in a home will never lose her throne and Aaath itealr k is NEVER TIMPUREâ€"while infinitely rapid strides in public favor because Japan teas should give it a trial There are abodes in the cityâ€" humble, two stories, four plain, unâ€" papered rooms; undesirable neighborâ€" hood, and yet there is a man here | beautifies it, sanctifies it. It is within her power to make it the most attractive place on earth. It is the only calm harbor in this world. You know as well as I do that this outside world and the business world is a long ‘scene of jostle and contenâ€" [ tion. ‘The man who has a dollar | struggles to keep it; the man who has it not struggles to get it. Prices up. Prices down. Losses. Gains. Misâ€" representations. _ Gougings, Underâ€" selling. Buyers depreciating; salesâ€" men _ exaggerating. Tenants seeking less rent; landlords demanding more. |Gold fidgety. Struggles about office. } Men who are trying to keep in; men out trying to get in. Slips. Tumbles. Defalcations. Panics. Catasâ€" trophes. O woman, thank God you have a home, and that you may be queen in it. Better be there than wear a queen‘s coronet. Better be there than carry the purse of a prinâ€" cess. Your abode may be humble.‘ but you can by your faith in God and your cheerfulness of demeanor gild it with splendors such as an upâ€" holsterer‘s hand never yet kindled. There are abodes in the cityâ€" My chief anxiety, then, is not that woman have other rights accorded her, but that she, by the grace of God, rise up to the appreciation of the glorious rights she â€" already possesses, I shall _ only have time to speak of one grand and all a>sorbing right that every woman has, and that is to make home happy. That realm no one has ever disputed with her. Men may come home at noon or at night, and they tarry a comparatively little while, but she all day governs it, beautifies it, sanctifies it. It is box, and you drop your vote. Right after you comes a libertine or a sot, the offscouring of the street, and he drops his vote, and his vote counterâ€" acts yours. But if in the quiet of home life a daughter by her Christian demeanor, a wife by her industry, a mother by her faithfulness, casts a vote in the right direction, then nothâ€" ing can resist it, and the influence of the vote will throb through the eterâ€" nities. sanship! Why, my friends, the Aght of suffrage, as we men exercise it, seems to be a feeble thing. You, a Christian man, come up to the ballot the sum of $25,000. Mr. and Mrs. Mead have taken steps to secure the still investigating the cases of Revs. McAmmond and Sanderson, who got into trouble in Syracuse, N. Y. Mr. Edwin Mead, a London man, has received word from Dublin to the effect that Mrs. Mead has been left [( ORCEL .s.s.s cutlee. versre | sn T ICOIEE : 4225s. wrscs csrere Farnham ...... ...... ... Maisonneure ...... ... Chicoutimli ... .... ... Coaticook ...... Granby ...... ... St. Hyacinthe Richmond ...... ooE lrlss.. ...:s» es Shawenegan ...... St Jerome ... ... Fraserville ... .. ‘The following is the population of some of the leading towns in Queâ€" ’ Italy, although more than Italian softâ€" ness filled the air. And I wandered around looking for thorns and netâ€" tles, but I found none of them grew there. And I walked forth, and I saw the sun rise, and I said, "When will they put on workingman‘s garb again and delve in the mine and swelter at the forge?" But neither the garments nor the robes did they put off. And I wandered in the subâ€" urbs, and I said, "Where do they bury the dead of this great city?" And I looked along by the hills where it would be most beautiful for the dead to sleep, and I saw castles and towers and battlements, but not a mausoleum, nor monument, nor white slab could I see. And I went into the great chapel of the town, and I said, "Where do the poor worâ€" ship? Where are the benches on which they sit?"" And a voice anâ€" swered, ‘"We have no poor in thissi great city." And I wandered out seeking to find the place where were the hovelse of the destitute, and I found mansions of amber and ivory and gold, but no tear did I see or sigh hear. I was bewildered, and I sat under the shadow of a great tree, and I said, "What am I and ‘ whence comes all this?" And at that moment there came from among the leaves, skipping up the flowery paths and across the sparkling waters, a very bright and sparkling group, and when I saw their step I knew it, and when I heard their volces I thought I knew them, but their apparel was so differâ€" ent from anything I had ever seen I bowed, a stranger to strangers. But after awhile, when they clapped their hands and shouted, "Welcome! Welâ€" come!" the mystery was solved, and I saw that time had passed and that eternity had come, and that God had gathered us up into a higher home, and I said, "Are all here?"" And the voices of innumerable generations anâ€" swered, "All here." And while tears of gladness were raining down our cheeks and the branches of the Lebanon ceâ€" dare were clapping their hands and the towers of the great city were chiming their welcome, we began to laugh and sing and leap and shout, "Home! Home! Home!" ‘The Perth Methodist Conference is *Decrease. One twilight, after I had been playing with the children for some time, I lay down on the lounge to rest, and, half asleep and half awake, I seemed to dream this dream: It seemed to me that I was in a far distant landâ€" not Persia, although more than orienâ€" tal luxuriance crowned the cities; nor the tropics, although more than tropiâ€" cal fruitfulness filled the gardens; nor at your feet all these allurements to dissipation and to fashion. Your imâ€" mortal soul cannot be fed upon such garbage. God calls you up to empire and dominion,. Will you have it? Oh, give to God your heart, give to God your best energies, give to God all your culture, give to God all your refineâ€" ment, give yourself to Him for this world and the next. Soon all these bright eyes will be quenched and these voices will be hushed. For the last time you will look upon this fair earth; father‘s hand, mother‘s hand, sister‘s hand, child‘s hand. wil be no more in yours. It will be night, and there will come up a cold wind from the Jordan, and you must start. Will it be a lone woman on a trackless moor? Ah, no, Jesus will come up in that hour and offer His hand, and He will say, "You stood by Me when you were well; now I will not desert you when you are sick." One wave of His hand and the storm will drop, and another wave of His hand and midnight shall break â€" into midnoon, and another wave of His band and the chamberlains of God will come down from the treasure houses of heaven with robes lustrous, blood washed and heaven glinted, in which you will array yourself for the marriage supper of the Lamb. And then with Miriam, who struck the timâ€" brel by the Red Sea, and with Deborah, who led the Lord‘s host into the fight, and with Hannah, who gave her Samâ€" uel to the Lord, and with Mary, who rocked Jesus to sleep while there were angels singing in the air, and with Florence Nightingale, who bound up the battle wounds of the Crimea, you will, from the chalice of God, drink to the soul‘s eternal peace. iffs and constables and mayors and presidents. To make one such good woman as I have described how many thousand would you want of these good people who go in the round of godlessâ€" ness and fashion and dissipation, disâ€" torting their body and going as far toward disgraceftul apparel as they dare go so as not to be arrested of the police, their behavior a sorrow to the good and a caricature of the vicious and an insult to that God who made them women and not gorgons, and tramping on, down through a frivolous and dissipated life, to temporal and eternal destruction. Oh, woman, with the lightning of your soul strike dead name as tenderly as she used to speak it you would be willing to throw yourâ€" self on the ground and kiss the sod that covers her, crying, "Mother, moâ€" ther!" Ah, she was the queenâ€"she was the queen. Now, can you tell me how many thousand miles a woman like that would have to travel down before she got to the ballot box? Compared with this work of training kings and queens for God and eternity, how insignificant seems all this work of voting for alderâ€" men and common councilmen and sherâ€" Some Quebec Powns. 3,773 9,210 2,057 7,057 2225 8,114 8,958 8,826 P oate Increase. 848 2,1782 1,416 *206 2,063 293 558 751 ney. Hoe ate his meal, made his bed upon the ground and, with a etone for a pillow, lay down to sleep. _ We ghould be encouraged to know that if cur; lot is especially hard, or if we are alone, or in humiliating cireumâ€" stances, we can, look for and expect the _ wonderful manifestations of God‘s presence. And as we journey on toward the land, in obediepae to God‘s commands, we may expect as wa look up to sec ‘"Christ, the true His mission. Although driven away from home as he was, yet his mission was an important one. His father had ‘"‘bleesed him, and charged him, and said unto him, Thou shalt not take a wife of the daughters of Canaan." _ Incidents by the way. Night overâ€" took him wea:jgd with the long jourâ€" to his mother‘s command he had startedl out in this peculiar way God‘s children are often mysteriously led. The journey. It was a long and soliâ€" tary one. Jacob was alone. It is not supposed that his means were so limâ€" ited that he was obliged to travel in this secluded manner, but affairs at! home were not in tha most pleasâ€" ant condition, and urged by the neâ€" ceesity of the case and in obedience Teachings.â€"Heaven is not far from earch, and the acceoss to Heaven is not difficult. We should be in an atâ€" titude of mind to receive divine comâ€" munications at any time. Jesus Christ has forever bridged the chasm beâ€" tween the finite and the infinite ; he is the way to God ; we can enter Heaven only through Him. PRACTICAL SURVEY. The circumstances connected with this lesson are very peculiar, and unâ€" like any other, in the word of God. 22. God‘s houseâ€"A place sacred to the memory of God‘s presence.â€"Jacoâ€" bus. The tenthâ€"As Abraham had done.â€"Gen. xiv. 20, 19. Bethelâ€""House of God." The original name was Luz, but Jacob named the place Bethel. 20. Jacob rowed a yowâ€"A vow is a solemn promise by which a man binds himself to perform cortain acts. When Jacob came to Bethel he was an unconverted man, and he was not converted while he was dreamâ€" ing. His words are not to b> considâ€" ered as implying a doubt. He did not dictate terms to God, but merely recognized the great promises God had made him; he really said that inasmuch as God had promised to susâ€" tain and keep him, therefore he would give himself to God and his service. 18. Set it upâ€"He placed the stone in an erect position. Poured oilâ€"Thus consecrated it to God, so that it might be considered an altar. 17. He was afraidâ€"Jacob had sinned and he knew it, and thereâ€" fore was in no condition toâ€" meet God. "His heart was not at home in the presence of God ; nor can any heart be so until it has been thorâ€" oughly emptied and broken."â€"C. H. M. How dreadfulâ€"A weâ€"inspiring, commonly rendered fearful or terâ€" rible.â€"Jacobus. To be in the preâ€" sence of God is a dreadful place for a sinner. The house of Godâ€"In whatâ€" ever place the soul of man feels the presence and power of God, there is the house of God.â€"Trapp. The gate of heavenâ€"Aliuding to the ladder he bhad seen in his dream. 16. The Lord is in this placeâ€"God has made this place his peculiar resiâ€" dence.â€"Clarke. God is often very near when the trial is most severe and it seems to us that he has forâ€" saken us entirely. 15. I am with thee, etec.â€""I will direct, help, and support thee in a peculiar manner." He is assured that he will not be cast away from the presence of God. 14. And thy seed, etec.â€"The _ old promise made to Abraham more than a century before this is here _ reâ€" newed, Of the earthâ€"The expresâ€" sion points to the worldâ€"wide uniâ€" vereality of the kingdGom of _ the seed of Abraham. 13. Stood above itâ€"From Jacob‘s ladder we receive the first definite intimation _ that â€" beyond "Sheol," heaven is the home of the man .â€" Lange. â€" To thee will 1 give itâ€"Of all the descendants of Abraham, "Jaâ€" cob had been selected as the one in whose line the covenant blessings should flow." 12. He dreamedaâ€"God has frequently appeared in dreams since Jacob‘s time. _ A ladderâ€"The design of the ladder was, 1. To show that God was watching over and regulating all things. 2. It pointed out the close connection â€" between heaven and earth, and between God and man. _ By him God comes down â€" to man; through him man ascends to God." Ange!ls of Godâ€"God would teachk Jacob the connecting _ and living intercourse between heaven and earth. 11. A*‘certain placeâ€"Near Luz.: V 19. This was between fiftyâ€"five and sixty miles northeast of Beerâ€"sheba. It must have been toward the close of the third day since he left home. One of the stones (R. Â¥.)â€"* This was no hardship for Jacob, as the Syrians to the same thing every night." ‘Sleeping on the grourd in the open air, where there is not even a bush for shelter is a common thing."â€"Hall. " A pillow of stone was but an outâ€" ward expression of Jacob‘s feelings at this time." Commentary. â€" 10. Jacob â€""The supplanter." Jacos iook advantage of hnis brother Esau, and by decepâ€" tion stole his blessing. The Lord had promised Rebekan that the birthâ€" right should be given to Jacob (chap. xxy. 28), and if she and Jacob had waited with faith for the fulflilment ol the promise, Jacob would have had honestly what he gained by trickery. * But it seemed to i:evekah and Jacob that God‘s promises were about to fail, and they must o something to bring the right thing to pass, even if they did a wrong in accomplishing it. But God did not need Jacob‘s sin in order to .carry out His plans ; the work would have been done infinitely better if Jacob had gained his birthâ€" right in God‘s way and God‘s time. From Beerâ€"shebaâ€"This was fortyâ€" five miles southwest of Jerusalem, where Isaac lived. Haranâ€"This was about 300 miles from â€" Beerâ€"sheba. Some say the distance was much greater. He went without a servant or any accommodations, except a staff (Gen. xxxii. 10);. on foot and alone he pursues his solitary journey. * Nor can we doubt that he was inâ€" wardly pained with the visitings of hlg faithful conscience."â€"Bush. Jacob at Bethel.â€"Gen. 28, 102. SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LKSSUN NO. X. SEPTEMEGEE 8, 1901. Â¥ Among the many wedding presents which are preparing will be one from the Byron Society. The society has arranged to receive subscriptions at its branches in Athons and Vienna, as well as in London. Mr. Herbert Gladstone was one of the founders of the society, the object of which is not, as so many people seem to think, to promote the study of Byâ€" ron, but to carry on the poet‘s policy for reviving among the Greek nation the arts and letters of its ancient VEC tss The Paget family into which Mr. Herbert Gladstone is about to marry is one of those Engiish commoner families which are too proud to claim any cqnnection with the ennobled Pagets, whose head is the Marquis of Anglesâ€"y. Sir Richard Horner Paâ€" get, Mr. Gladstone‘s future fatherâ€" inâ€"law, is a Somerset ‘Squire â€" pure ‘ and simple. He sat for something like thirty years as a Somersetshire memâ€" ber in the House of. Commons, and when ho retired in 1895, he was made a Privy Councillor. He had been made previously a baronet, and owns a fair amount of land for a baronet, some 4,000 acres among the Mendip Hills, where the famous Cranmore Tower is a mark for miles around. The marriage between Mr. Gladâ€" stone and Miss Pag»t is one more proof of the amenities of English politics. The Right Hon. Sir Richard Horner Paget was always one of the "Old Gang," and got his reward for services to the party which his fuâ€" ture sonâ€"inâ€"law »pends his life in combating. D oua ECCE DF ETDE Li ty s vor, and ‘suowed a certain amount of orfglnality in accepting the post of Chief Whip, after he had served as First Commissioner of Works. Mr. Akersâ€" Dougias, on the other side of the House, precisely _ reversed this procedure. Coming Union Two of Prominent w English Famiries. Mr. Herbert Gladstone, whose maâ€" trimomai engagement has just been maue public, says the London Chroniâ€" cle, was generally regarded as a conâ€" lirmed bachelor, which is scarcely surprising, because his tale of years is not far short of half a century. For over twenty years he has sat in the House of Commons, but thanks to his devotion of physical culture, those years have passed very lightly over his head, ana his figure is still quite youthiul. Overshacowed as it is by tne m mory of a great historical figure, he could scarcely expect to achieve much in politics, but he has proved hirgself a useful administraâ€" & great pilgrimage of the Catholic world to the tomb of the Apostles, and the feet of the Pope. " 4. The Peter‘s Pence in these sail terms must be held rather as a sweet and necessary, nay, almost a perceptive tribute of faith{ful chilâ€" dren of the Church to the Holy Father, than as an alms. A concourse in aid of Catholic missions and other great works promoted by him, so that Holy Church may always better provide for the many needs of souls and the greater diffusion of faith. On the approaching occasion, thereâ€" fore, let Catholiecs be more generous than usual in their offerings to the Holy Father." "8. For the second half of April of the year 1902, it has been deâ€" termined there should take place "2. To the sisters of the female institutions, the Catholic ladies of each and every diocese, by their able and plous work they prepare in aid of poor churches a special display of sacred vestments to be, afterwards distributed in the respective _ dioâ€" ceses, 6 "1. The object of affection forall must be the cathedral church of the Roman Pontiff, the archâ€"Basilica of Bt. John Lateran, to the vault of which certain repairs are urgently needed, Here we make respectfal appeal to the pastors of all the dioâ€" ceses that their priests, yielding to their paternal invitation, would deign to set apart for the s m> purpose the stipendium of one mass. _ This the venerable priests will be able to reâ€" mic into the hands of the bishops, who will present it with a list of _ subâ€" scribers to the Holy Father by means of the cardinal vicar, President of the committee, Continuing, they say : "The desire of comforting the heart of the Holy Father has further gunded us to these other «designs for which we make a fervent appeal to al Catholies. The committee goes on to commend special acts of devotion. "‘To increase the beauty of order, which will naturally be resplendent in the manifestations of so many milâ€" lions of hearts, united through the charity of Christ‘s heart only, the work of Catholic congresses, the Primary Roman Society of Catholic Interests, and the Committee â€" for Homage to the Redeemer have been formed in fraternal union under the presidency of the cardinal viecar of His Holiness." "An extraordinary event approaches to give joy to the Church of Christ. But a few months and the universal {ather of the faithfual, the Sovereign Pontif{, Leo XIIL, will begin, under divine favor, the twentyâ€"fifth year of a pontificate that will remain glorâ€" ious in all agos. ‘The special commiitee on the celeâ€" bration of the twentyâ€"fifth anniverâ€" sary of the elevation to the potifiâ€" cate of Leo XIII. have issued a special appeal through the bishops to the Catholic world. Archbishop O‘Connor, of ‘Toronto, has received a copy. In part it reads: CALL ISSUED TO CATKHOLICS. IN POPE LEO‘S HONDR Twenty »â€"Fifth Anniversary .of His Elevation. His vows to God. 1. They were from the heart. They were not made when he wasns asgleep, 2. They involved not only what he had but what he exâ€" pected to have. He promised to give the Lord ai tenth of hi@ income. Let vuél learn; the lesson of dependence on the Lord and this moment make the whole of Jacob‘@ vow our vow., ladder, opening the way oi communâ€" lcation between heaven and carth, and sccuring to us acceptance with God, the protection of Providence, the ministrations of His angels, and the consolation of His Spirit ; thus will every place become pleasant, and every prospect joyful." GLADSTONEâ€"PAGET. s T HIHHTUHNITHHT Ti imee m inssc sc u0 ONTARIO aArcHives R it rest and brought l(.)-WI;(‘);t uI where he will appear tefore trate KWollan ls. A Court Case, Rat Portage Reportâ€"The For+ Frances Times teolls of the lLroubles the contractors on the Rainy River geotion of the Canadian Northern have had with Doukhoborse who have been engaged in construction work,. l The Doukhobors were engaged unâ€" der contract for three monthé, but since the harvest commenced in \Mnnitabu they have wanted to get back west. The contractors, however, refugsed to give them their time until they put in their three monthsé. Last week a number of these men wanted to leave one, of J. %. Stewart‘s sub contractorse, Mike Hogan, and on the latter refusing to give them their time checks, he was carried off into the woods and kept there two days, when he consented to give them their time, They then came to Mine Centre and presented their time checks to Mr. Stewart and Gemanded their money. Mr. Stewart tried to explain that the money was in the bank at Fort Frances, down, the river, where they would get paid. This did not suit them, and they seized Mr. BStewâ€" art and threatened to cut his head off if he did not pay at onee, The appearance of Conetable Bedâ€" ford put a stop to their game, and the rlng_ler'lder was placed under arâ€" And Held Contractor a person going from McDonald‘s roar field into the field where the poison was found, yet McDonaild had no potatoes or other occasion for the use of Paris green. The ticket MeDonald had purchased for Dakota was only a single. This the court did not feel was sufficient evidence to commit for trial. There was one witness subpocnaed who evaded #opâ€" vice, but the court decided to close without hearing him, although rumâ€" ors have it that he was in possesâ€" sion of damaging evidence, but it being merely rumor, it was not deemed advisable to _ further post~ pone the trial. The analyst was not here. Paris green in it, which showed traces of having been recently disâ€" turbed, and _ a _ small quantity of green was epilt on the step leading into the outhouse where the green was kept, and tracks were found of Paris green was 'til;tit~il’n‘eqr;--;';n' A can found in MeDonald‘s house with The Paisley Magistrate Acquits Mr. MeDonaldâ€"The Evidence Weak. Palsley Report.â€"â€"The ease of poiâ€" soning of Farmer Rugolph‘s cattle, which was opened _ and adjourned, was taken up here again toâ€"day. The evidence given showed that salt, well covered with Paris green, was placed in the field where the cattle pastured. The only evidence given to connect Mr. MeDonald with Paris_ green was that there was a en ‘... .. ... .. .. 69 1â€"2b G9 7â€"8t Duluth, No. 1 hard 7134b w Toronto Fruit Market. A large trade was done at the Jocal market toâ€"lay and prices were unâ€" changed. The receipts were heav y. Apples, per basket, 20 to 35¢ : grapes, per !b., 5e ; Champion, 3¢ ; huckle berries, per basket, 90¢ to $1 ; Jemâ€" one, per box, $4.50 to $5 ; Lawton berries, per basket, 7 1â€"2 to 9¢ ; muskâ€" melons, per crate, 40 to 75¢c, per basâ€" ket, 15 to 25¢ ; oranges, per box, $4 to $5; peaches, Canadian, 40¢ to &1 : penars, California, per crate, $3.25 to $3.75 ; do. Canadian, per basket, 25 to 40e ; Bartlett, 40 to 500 :; plume, California, per box, $1.50 to $2.50 : do. Canadian, per basket, 30 to 75e : tomatoes, per basket, 10¢ to 20c : watermelons each 121â€"2 to 30c. Chicago ... New York Toledo ... .. Duluth, No Closing quotations at important centres toâ€"day : Uy D CSS OOD MOMDCERRRYAYIRiR.Akk.. T TV UV Hogs, t, per cwt............ 675 vo Bocl,uf&m DWLGâ€":++xrssesr+» 6 78 bo SQWE;DERCWE.+>~+~«>+>++*srcee 40 E9 Leading Wheat Markets. do per Cwt, ......... Calves, per head ... ... Hogs, choice, per cwt offâ€"colors and heifers Milch cows, each... ... Sheep, ewes per cwt. ED: LCE ++ > +s + x + + 2 EO EME : . 1 1 a + + 1 x s +1 w e Lambs, each........... P cOrD OWE +114 2s 1+ +4 ++ n +5 + ns Butchers caitle picked....... Butchers‘ cattle, choice..... ... Butchers‘ cattle, fair........... 0 ©OMION,,..+.+ ; 4..... EOOAE YE T s 3y cler x c x n in n aiab 6 ?lt:'bulls....li“.‘.‘.. ulls, export, heavy, per ewt. Bulls, export, livh*" per owt... Feeders, shortâ€"krep ..... ..... 10; ARBOEEN berrks â€"+>>1 4s s 4.+ do light .. Stockere, 100 to 600 1bs, ... ... ... Picton, Ont., Aug. 28. â€"At our Cheese Board toâ€"day filteen factorâ€" ies boarded 1,105 cheese, all _ colâ€" ored. Highest bid 9 1â€"16:. All sold. Stirling, Aug. 28.â€"At the Stirling Cheese Board toâ€"day 815 boxes white were boarded. â€" Salesâ€"Watkin, 325 at 91â€"16:; Ottawa Cold Storâ€" age Co., 200 at 9 1â€"16>; Brenton, 90 at 9c. Russell, Aug. 28.â€"At the Russell Cheese Board toâ€"night 375 cheese were boarded ; 83â€"4¢c for whiteand 9e for colored bid. No sales. Toronto Live Stock Markets. l:x;:ort cattle, choice, perowt. $1 75 to $5 15 WosJstock, Ont., Aug. 28.â€"Fifteen hundred and fiftyâ€"four boxes of cheese were offered at the cheess market toâ€"day; 310 boxes sold at 9 1â€"4¢c; market dull. Hay and Strawâ€"Twenty loads of ne’ hay sold at $2 to $11 a ton, and five loads of. straw at $9 to £$10.50 a ton. Oatsâ€"A thousand bushels sold firmer at 41 1â€"2¢ for old and 36 1â€"2 to 37c for new. Ryeâ€"One load sold 51 1â€"2e. Wheatâ€"Two hundred bushels of red and white fail wheat sold at 73¢ for old and 69 1â€"2 to 72¢ for new. One hundred bushels of goose sold higher at 69 to 69 1â€"2c. Barleyâ€"Seven hundred bushels sold 4¢c higher, at 52 to JG5 1â€"2c.* _ CATTLE POISONING CASE. Toronto Farmers‘® Market. Receipts of grain on the street market here toâ€"day, 2,200 bushels ; wheat steady, barley higher, and omats {irmer. DOUKS WANTED PAY, domedium.......... , cOrn fed No. 1 north Cheese Markets. of straw at $9 to Fort Frances, as a Prisonerâ€" 71 3â€"4 Cash. I 69 1â€"8n 71 dol N 77 1 â€"4a 73 T B AL & I| [1