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Durham Review (1897), 10 Oct 1901, p. 7

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(young plants. E NO. 41, 1901. ted fertilizers. aturc of some children them from thriving my food Such chil- v right ii treated right. 'Y nced i, a little fer- lizth- mam richness. 'imuritr, i, the right ‘mplexion IHTANT ICTIDN SALE unit are Invlulute Vdren ’s 'ertilizer. mld Life was fompany rn Nth1 H M mulsto It ocroM Lrot nt ordinary soil. m A) N Tyt .‘nngsgm'. i as Emai. lm children in strength. ,w in mind, 3 what we .1 sum the. months. or my palm». xlwr sight MEN? \UIJM mit ttik Add!” who“ p ylvnnia M L as it a 'rthr- v of a tale- Hny to i.- n 'nh/iii “Pd- 00,000 ft, O' info" re Iron during h, Gi name for Children, h “strict, Wm " .Ifa In. tee ttte , km“ I immr. TH! tifo Mb. lop}, walla ' Ion. RACK h 0|]: my- I90! and ttik IRE " I: M red Dan " To by 'ttt PRID- nr he by he and. which has always been LT'" irc prtant commercial center. belonging a diaerent times to Mich, to Greece. to Rome. to Arabia, to thtaia, to France. now being. to England. Che area of the bland is about 100 - miles. It is in the Iediterra- mean sea and of such clarity of smog. were that Mount Anna, m mu” guy, can be distinctly neon. The island is gloriously numb]. beam the Knight-1 ot Malta for a long while ruled there. but most [alum be.. - of the apostolic shipwmh. m heetormed vessel on which Paul sailed had “laid to" On the starboard tack. and the wind was blowing -totortheaat, and the «net drift- in: orobably a mile and ahau an hour. she struck at what is now eaiied St. Paul's bar. Practical “More have taken up the Bible ac- (ount and decided beyond oontro- may the place of the shipwreck. But the inland, which has so rough a coat. is tor the most part a gir- den. Richest fruits and a profusion at honey characterised it in Paul’- tune, as well as now. The ttneat or- ’gnges, ttgm and olives grew there. I When Paul and his comrades crawled up on the beach, saturated and hungry from long abstinence trom food and chilled to the bone, the islanders, though called barbari- ans because they could not speak Greek. opened their doors to the ship- wrecked unfortunates. Everything had (one to the bottom ot the deep, and the barefootr-d. bareheaded amtle and ship's crew were in a condition to ap- preciate hospitality. About twentr-tlve such men a few years ago I found in the lite station near East Hampton, Long Island. They had got ashore in the night from the sea. and not a hat or shoe had they left. They found out, as Paul and his fellow voyagem found out. that the sea is the roughest of all robbers. My text finds the ship’s crew uhore on Malta and around a hot tire drying themselves and with the bent trfll"'t'2e, the laianderw can offer them. . nd they go into government quarters tor .three days to recuperate, Publius, the ruler, inviting them. although he had severe sickness in the house at the time, his father down with a danger- oue iiinesa Yea, for three months they stayed on the island watching for a ship and putting the hospitalitles of the islanders to a severe test. But it endured the test satisfactorily, and it is recorded for all the ages ot time and eternity to read and hear in regard to the inhabitants ot Malta, “The barn . harous people showed us no little hind- " ' mnrn m; i "r protective sewing wo- I Ben's it 'rirrt Wong, and it would dulll '., ry mum! until It would not cut skin MT, and umvheel every battery till, ' ‘ouhl not roll, and make gunpowder C' no mun» use in the world except for. "Oak blasting or pyrotechnic celeb“- ion. Kindness In . spirit divinely mplanted and in answer to PM". 1nd then to be seduiously eutttvat" mm it ttttg all the nature with . pct- ‘umo richer and more pm: thin mimetic. and. u " you a! , trn rf an: aromatic beauty how the dock on tho mantel or in some corner . as a part. You cannot enact It. Br 'he gnu-e or God you must have It In- "do you, an evef.asttng summer. or, -nther. a combination of June and 0c- uber, the sexuality ot the one and the onii. of tho other. It cannot dwell Aitlt arrogance or splte or revenge W malwvolpnce. At lea ttrat 89M?- "In? In the soul all these Amalekiteo [nu Umgishitws and Hittite: and Jerm- Ivtw muut cult. and can forever-ever, inn well, "very woman well, - :b'ld “on. pvcry bird well, even bone Well, every dog well, every cut wen. Jwe this spirit full swing, end you Knulrl have no more need of societies tor prevention of cruelty to agtiggtattt, “l moro In“? I of protoetMre terhtq wo- 'nan‘s cv'srtiationa, and " would dull "very sword until It would net ttttt Ain Them, is kindness of disposition, nndness of word, kindness of set, Ind there is Jesus Christ, the un- pprttortatiott of all of them. Kindness'. You cannot affect It. You cannot play Kindness! What a great word that Il'. It would tatre n reed u Ion; no that which the apolealyptlc angel used to measure heaven to tell the length, the breadth, the height of that munitt- cent worn It ls a favorite Bible word, and it h early launched in the Hook of Genesis, caught up ln the Book of Joshua, embraced in the Book of Ruth, sworn by in the Book at Sam- uel. crowned In the Back of “that! and enthroned in many places In the New Testament. Klndneu! A word no more gentle than mighty. I expect It will wrestle me 'down before I set through with It. It I. “rent enough to throw an archangel. But It will be well for us to stand around It and warm ourselves by "a slew " Paul and his fellow voyager: stood around the tire on the Island of .llaltl. where the Maltese made themselves Immor- al in my text by the way they treated thelr victims of the Bea. "The barber- out! people showed no no little kind- new.“ "Why. I can give you a definition of kindness: it is aunshlne of the soup, it ire affection perennial; it is a climac- feric grace; it is the combination of nit traces; it is compassion; it in the per- (“t-Hon of gentle mnnlineas and wo- "unliness." Are you all through? You have made a dead tnllure In your def- lnition. It cannot be defined, but we m know wat it is, for we have alt Mt its power. Some ot mil In! have felt n [is Paul felt it, on some coat of rock as the ship went to pieces. but more ot us have attain and scam in Home awful stress of life had either from earth or heaven hands stretched out which "showed us no little kind- mess." Kindness! All dettnltionig of that multlpotent wor'd break down In]: way. You say It In clemency, benig- rnty. generosity; it a made up of good wishes; lt is an expression of beuett- r-ence; it Is a contribution to the tsap- ”mess of others. some one else ”VS: new we are on the Island of Malta. another name for Items. This In. Washington. Sept. SS.-9n a “a: Dr. Tame com attirt of unity and good to.“ muons Illustrious alumna I with. Text. Act: uvul, St what-ans people showed in n nuances." 733' We: at that H. 2: "The In no little . rr' an“. , P3'if Gi ' my on: pulpit. Dr. Van vmun ner bu been dead more than thirty yet". Are you resolved to Bet it? It does not come by haphazard, but through culture under the divine help. This- tles grow without culture. Rocky mountain use grass grows without culture. Mulleln stalks grow Without culture. But that great red rose in 'the conservatory, its leaves pached on leaves, deep dyed as though it had been obliged to tight for its beau- ty and it were still teelting with the carnage of the battle. that rose needed F to be cultured. and “rough long years Its floral ancestors were cultured. 0 l God, Implant kindness in all our souls _ and then give us grace to watch it, to ienrich it, to develop it! a man with a broken arm; we will have a. doctor come to attend to this fracture." And, though tor three months the kindness went on, we have little more than this brief record: "The barbarous people showed us no little kindness." on. say the cordial thing'. Say the useful thing. Say the hospitable thin; Say the hopeful thing. Say the Christ- like thing. Say the kind thing. I ad- mit that it is easier for some tempera- ments than for others. Some are born pessimists. and some are born opti- mists, and that demonstrates itself all through everything. The man of good reputation Is assailed and charged with some evil deed. At the ttrgt ”story the pessimist will believe in guilt. "The papas said so, and that’s enough. Down with him.'" The optimist will say: " don't think that a man mat has been as useful and seemingly hone est tor twenty years could have trot oft track like that. There are two sides to this story. and I wilt wait to hear the other side before I condemn him." My bearer, if you are by na- tute a pessimist. mike a special et- fort by the grace ot God to extirpate the dolorous and the tsrperer1tietr1 from your disposition. Believe nothing against anybody until the wrong is es- tablished by at least two witnesses ot integrity. And. if guilt be proved, find out the extenuating circumstances, if there are any. Kindness'. Let us morning, noon and night, pray for it until we get it. Still further, I must speak of kind- ness ot word. When you meet any one, do you say a pleasant thing or an unpleasant? Do you tell him of agreeable things you hive heard about him or the disagreeable? When he leaves you does he feel better or does he reel worse? Oh, the power of the tongue for the production of happiness or misery! One would think from the way the tongue is caged in we might take the hint that it has a dangerous power. First it is chained to the back part of the mouth by strong muscles. Then it is surrounded by the teeth of the lower jaw,somany ivory bars,and then by the teeth of the upper jaw, more Ivory bars. Then, outside of all are the two lips, with the power ot compression and arrest. And yet, notwithstanding these tour imprison- ments or limitations, how many take no hint in regard to the dangerous power or the tongue, and the results are laceration, scariiication and dam- nation. There are those if they know a good thing about you and a bad thing will mention the bad thing and act as though they had never heard the good thing. Now, there are two sides to almost every one's character, and We have the choice of overhauling the virtue or the vice. We can greet Paul and the ship's crew 3 they come up the beach of Malta with the words: "What a sorry looking set you are! How little of navigati n you must know to run on these rocks! Didn't you know better than to put out on the Mediterranean this wintry month? It was not much of a ship anyhow, or it would not have gone to pieces as soon as that. Well, what do you want? We have hard enough work to make a living for ourselves without having thrust on us 276 ratrtunumntt." Not so said the Maltese. I think they said: "Come in'. Bit down by the tire and warm yourselves. Glad that you all trot of! with your lives. Make yourself at home. You are welcome to all we have until some ship comes in sight and you resume your voyage. Here, let. me put a bandage on your tore- head, for that is an ugly gash you Bot from the ttoatintt timbers. And here is ,.- "mung about your room looking this way and that, and you ask them, "What are you looking for?" and they answer. "Where is that tlower?" so it one has in his soul this inttntte sweet- ness of disposition its perfume Will whelm everything. Let us all pray for the spirit of kind- ness. It will settle a thousand ques- tions. It will change the phase of everything. It will mellow through and through our entire nature. It will transform a lifetime. It is not a feel- ing trot up for occasions, hut peren- nlal. This is the reason I like pe- tunlns better than morning glories- They look very much alike. and if I should put into your hand a petunia and a morning glory you could hardly tell which is the petunia. and which the morning glory. But the morning glory blooms only a few hours and then shuts up tor the day, while the petunia is in as widespread a glow at 12 o'clock at noon and 6 o’clock in the evening as at sunrise. And this grace of kindness, is not spasmodic. it is not intermittent, is not for a little while, but it irradiates the whole nature all through and clear until the sunset of our earthly existence. Kindness.' I am resolved to set It. You resolved to get it? n does come by haphazard, but through Ire under the divine help. This- Brow without culture. Rocky thl 11ollirtgtitone Nomotur--De July job I ever had was as a horrible exam- ple. Thirsty Thintrumttotr-0etrt. dat most , 1ttterrtrrtat. Did der geep‘you booted all de time? Rommtone Ku-s-traw; it wasn't Jul. hind. I was a horrible example far I soap sale-man. l Wonderful Work Done to Give " Comforts of Civilization. What a change from the Klon- dike of only n, year or two ago! Then it took months to get into the country. To enter by the White Horse or the Chiicoot Pass meant to face the hardships of travelling on a wretched mountain trail and through asent1-a.retic wild- erness. Hundreds turned back and abandoned the hopes tor which they had sacrificed precious time and money. Yet that route was nplea- sunt and easy one compared with those from Gienora. or Edmonton. The number of men who, attempt- ing the latter, perished by the way is one of the most deplorable inci- dents in the history ot gold mining in North America. A few months have elapsed. and to-day one can go to Dawson in a week or two, travelling in comfortable steam- bouta or railway coaches. Arrived there he will find himself not in a chaotic assemblage of tents nor in the Antarctic Stragwarot low des- peradoes. but in a town with wat- erworks, electric lights. churches. schools. a municipal government and a telegraph ornee.-Winnipett Tri- me. o And while we take this matchless kindness from God may it be found that we have uttered our last bitter word. written our last cutting para- graph, done our last retaliatory ac- tion, felt our last revengeful heart throb. And it would not be a, bad epitaph for any of us if, by the grace of God, trom this time forth we lived such benetheent lives that the tamb- stone‘s chisel could appropriately out upon the plain slab that marks our grave a suggestion from the text: “He showed us no little kindness." But not until the last child of God haa got ashore from the earthly storms that drove him on the rocks like Mediter- ranean Euroclydons, not. until all the throne- ot heaven are mounted, and all the conquerors crowned, and all the harps and trumpets and organs of heaven are thrummed or blown or sounded and the ransomed of all climes and ages are in full chorus un- der the Jubilant swing of angelic ha- ton, and we shall for thousands ot year: have Been the river from under the throne rolling into the ”sea of glass mingled with tire," and this world we now inhabit shall be so far in the put that only a stretch ot celestial memory can recall that it ever existed at all. not until then will we understand what Nehemiah calls "the great kindness." and Isaiah calls "the everlasting kind- ness" of God. H. Stephens, of Georgia-and lovelier man never exchanged earth for heaven -when at Washington. A senator’s wife, who told us of the circumstan- ces, said to him, "Mr. Stephens, come and see my dead canary bird." And he answered, "No; I could not look at the poor thing without crying." That Kindness to all! Surely it ought not to be a dimeult grace to cultivate when we see towering above the centuries such an example that one glimpse of it ought to melt and transform all na- tions. Kindness brought our Lord from heaven. Kindness to miscreants. kindness to persecutors. kindness to the crippled and the blind and the oat- aleptic and the leprous and the drop- sicol and the demonlacai characterised him all the way and on the crass; kind- ness to the bandits suffering on the side of him, and kindness to the execu- tioners while vet they pushed the spear and hammered the spikes and howled the blasphemies. All the stories of the John Howards and the Florence Night- ingales and the Grace Darlings and the Ids Lewises pale before this trangeen- dent example or him whose birth and life and death are the greatest story that the world ever heard and the theme of the mightiest hosanna that heaven ever lifted. Yea, the very kind- ness that allowed both hands to be nailed to the horizontal timber of the cross with that cruel thump, thump, now stretches down from the skies those same hands filled with balm tor all our wounds, forgiveness for alt our crimes. rescue from all our seifdoms. you In the carriage on the way to court passed on the road a. swine fast In the mire, after awhile cried to his homes, "Whoa'." and said to the gen- tlemen, "I must go back and help that hog out of the mire." And he did so back and put on solid ground that most uninteresting quadruped. That was the spirit that was manifested by my departed friend. Hon. Alexander is the spirit which last night ten thousand mothers showed to their sick children coming to give the drink at the tenth call as cheerfully and as tenderly as at the first call. KLONDIKE 0F TO-DAV. Perf T‘Slmday Sena ' Joseph also inturpreted the dream of the baker. Vs. 16-19. On the third dasafter this Pharaoh made a birth- day least, and the butler was re- stored to his otnce and the baker was hanged. "as Joseph had Inter- preted to them." The butler, how- ever, forgot Joseph. I PRAUHCAL SURVEY. The enmity of Joenph’o brethren Md (animated in selling him to the manna, who in turn sold In. to Fatima: In mm. Here Ga! w” nth Mn. and his water, "etrte " . 16. I was trtolerr-Joorplt makes, a very modest statement with re- ference to himself. He does not re- t1mtt upon those who had sold him, or dwell upon tho Treat wrong done him in his imprisonment}; he merely states the facts and declares his in- nocence. kind of tho Hebrews - "Juden. was probably known try this name in Egypt." Done nothing -3os- eplt's way Is now for a. time In dark- ness but this la the very way through which God often leads his p_o1e.-r>ettre, a ' . . 14. Than on me-dosepl1 had much yet to do in this world. He was to become "the shepherd and the stone of Israel;" he was to be lord of Pharaob's house; he was to become the father of two power- NI tribes In Israel. Bring me out-. "He desires enlargement not pre- ferment. Providence sometimes de- signs the greatest honors tor thone that least covet or oxpect thvm." 11. Pressed them-From this we find that wine unclently was the pure juice of the grape. without fermentation. The cup-bearer took tho bunch. pressed the juice into tito cup, and Immediately delivered it into the hands of hie matrter.-. Clarke. 13. Lift up thinv httad-Th1s may refer to a cuatom which the kings of Egpt observed when those sup- posed to he guilty of great crimes were punished. and others less guitly weru pardoned. G. Each man- .... in ona ttight-This shows that the dreams were of the Lord. While our ordinary dreams have no special significance, yet it cannot tr, denied that God has in many cases. especially in early times, spoken in dream-1. According to the interpretation-This expres- Hion is intend“) to show that the dreams were not meaningless. but suited to eguylt man’s case and capa- ble ot a .soundinterpretation.--Hour. _6. Bau-Tluur were sure their dreams had more than an ordinary meaning. . A. Charged Joseph, eta-The cap- tain of the guard himself, who was Potiphar, chnrg d Joseph with them, which intimates that he. began now to Ito reeorafted to him, and perhaps to bs convinced of his 'nnocence.- Henry. He served them --Joeeph waited upon them. Bo longus God is with him, Joseph will shine even In tho dungeon. S. No interpreter-One thing that troubled them was that Hwy wpre not in a position to submit their dreams to the magicians of Egypt. who were HunBosed to be able to interpret dreams. But Joseph point- ed them to his God as the one who could reveal difficult things. Tali me them-Thug had God at last brought Joseph prominently before thate officers. 12. Three branchus' are threedays -Human knowlndgn rould not have known that these branches had re- ference to time,' or it they did havo whether three days. months, or years View intended. T. Wherefore ...... so iradlr-Jotreplt spoke kindly to them; he,, too, was a common sufferer with manual“) understood their feelings. 1. The h ttler-The cupbenrer and overseer of the wine-making and storing and serving; an importnpt of- near ot the tr1ng.--Jatsottue. Baker-- This was another officer in trust of the king's bread and its making; and his post was one of high trust, be- cause they who had charge of the food of the king mlg'lt easily poison 1t1rn.-Jacob 18. Had ofhuded - High places are slippery places-Henry. 8. la the houge--The state prison was in oonn'ction with Pot1phar's residence. Bee on verse At. Ifl. The Lord was with Jmreph-- “This In an example on the strength ot God's ansolxtlona in the worst trims." Josey. h Id power wi.ttin Hm, which enabled Him to pres Iorward, awn thumb it was very dark before him. The chipllne seemed severe ; he was entering as a martyr. 23. Banana the Lord, cur-"Th0 reason of his inntseneo was the God within him. Just a) Carl as a, man is Christlure wrl In have innueneo." "Wisdom and virtue will shine in ttte nag-raga spheres.” heart pare and his actions right. HU Thin], an instance m surtering un- Very goodness. however. ttutame at Justly. How careful Joseph had been last so (him-she to this Wicked wo- to in true to the trust confided to man that she {duly accused Joseph .him by his master. how watchful and ot bin. and, w.tno.it trial. he was determined to be true to God and cast into prison by his master.- keep his conscience clean! But here 20. into the pruon--'Iha pruhubiy I he is in whom a eotnpanion ot crim- implies an ounce, or punk-n of the I innis, counted as nut! or them. his good omoiul mansion. many subta'run- name milled. his reputation and honor can, of which the Mr or mun. ris- none In the eyes of mm. Thus the his immediately trom the surface ot Master was "despised and rah-ted ot tho grout”, mm r mud. or slum-d like _ mm." His footsteps {allowed by an lines-ten bowl. H was 1lure--umr. malice, envy and hntrod to tho end eph wins in prism three years. 5 of Hi: mission. 22 Keeper ot the prisost--An Infer- lor offlcur who wan (h rged with the actunJ disclp ine of the prlsonr El m. Com. Committed to Joseph‘s h nd-- We see here ttt , real nature of humus Influenca. " is not the inf.uoncc ot rank, bat ot character. M Ike all men equal In rank to-duy. and. tomorrow thin-e will Be founj those who have acquired influence uvm- the others. ot Pharaoh (pronounced (a re). Potl-' Phat wan probably the captun of I thoulnnd mtldi,.rre, and consequently! a man ot ttrust powar nnJ. lnlluence. I Joceph served in I'otoaar's house- hold tor tan years, tutd was so wlse and lulthlul that Potiphur raised hlm to a high vosltiou nnJ gave him general charge of all his personal af- l, Iain. But a great trial was now about to come to Joseph. Potl- puur'a mic. who was a very wicked woman, endeavored to lead Joseph into sin; but by God’s help he was enabled to resist every temptation and to keep Ills life unturnlaued. his heart pus sled his muons right. Hie Very goodness. however. tratauae at last no oitensive to this wwked wo- ngan that she {duly accued Joseph 100091: In Ptirtrn.--aaret.ak_t IE Commentary. - Connectlng Hutu. When Joseph was taken to 1iUrttt by the hhnmeliteu he was cold to Poti- phnr, the captain of the tsody-guard unnumAnoum. unusual Mo. ll. 03108193 13, 1001. The Orange Free State nag tint waved over CrunJe‘a [anger at Paar- deberg, and the revolver Hut Mr. Rudyard Kiprat as a boy used to fire over the mud that. an tod In “The Light Thu Failed," were uttered tor sale by nuctitm in London recently. W. B. Russell. engineer In charge of the Tmnisearningue Railway Sur- vey. has reported to the Depart- ment of Public Work that he nu located the line 25 muss north Iran North Bay. and We a prolimlu may {an t'or, Tlletqngrthu. a report! a I t . . good rate tor the use. " "I The annual rep rrt ot the Board of Trade In regard to railways in the United Kingdom shows that the re- ceipts trom passenger traffic dur- ing the your amwntad to £45,000.- 000. or this sum $28,000,000 came from third-cltustr passenger-a. The receipts from {nights during the year were £59000.000. The Grand Trunk Railway has de- cided to establish branch tieket ot- iieea at Little Current, Gore Bay and Smlt Sto. Marie, Mltshdtraat,tusd Mr. Charles Proctor, travelling pas- senger agent, has gone north to open the ottieeg. The London correspondent of the N. Y. Tribune says: tatottish swarms would seem to hold aloof trpm Mr. (:mneglv’s nmnlficent university mheme. Tttia is the effect of the Exe- guth'ga committees report, Nat pub- Tho steamer M. M. Drake and her tow, the barge Michigan, suc- cumbed to the fury of the northwest gals on L:ko, Superior, west ot Ver- ml.lion Point. The crews were saved. . The German Government. " bt said, placed the astronomical instru- menu, which were seized at the Chinese capital. at the dismal of L'nina. The Chinese authorities re- plied, renouncing possession ot the 1nstrumonhr, owing to the trouble of replacing them. H. R. H. the Duchess of Cornwall an York has presented Lady Strath.. cona. with a handsome gold brace- let, hearing her name, "Victoria May." Itt dbmondu. The census enumeralors of North Oxford banqucted the commissioner tor the riding, Mr. Alina! 8. Bali, and presented him with an address and a gold watch. ligrhmI. Him tides h we d an n, lot of dam- age In the Maritime lrnvirtcea. A (2 mph (1'80 tions or tho Iuierctt'on'uxl 1:411le have trern washed out. W. C. Hamilton,. K. C., a promin- ent lawyer and one or Regina‘s earliest settlers. is dead. all” an illness of a tew days' duration. Mr. Mackenzie guys the road to Ely to con-amt the Great Northern of Cannia with the Duluth and Iron Range Runway will be built. The City Assess»:- ttue fixed Wood- stock's population at 9,257. This is 424 in advance of the Dominion unn- Mr. Edward II. Harriman has been el'cted l'rmldunt of the Southern l’..ol I' Hallway tit a,trtritogt to Mr. C. M. ths. . A tel 1-51sz to the Marine ”part- ment slut s that tit ' lruque Dummy; in u total wrvck at ll pewel, N. ll. The crew it we bet-manned. up: vol " his halos. First, " mm at unnamed tn- tegrlély. he character ot Joseph to one the brightest which dunes on tho M oe history. He lived tn an 9.39 when col-rumor: of moral- mu 'reel. Ire tea ed the} prospect of 8 mad. the [widows and malimity of tho accuser and the muutlnn. Herself the ottendcr agalnnt right, she boldly assumes 'the air ot lnjlred Innocence. and with a very great show ot outraged sirtue accuses one who u, entirely innocent ot a. grave crime. She well knew that her no. cusatlon naught cost Joseph his Illa, bat so great was her mallgnlty that his Integrity contrasted with her perndy only tterved to "rouse her enmity and malice. and she deter- mined to wreak vengeance upon him. Fourth, Damn practical ittrerenors. Joseph's brhu-lm’ Ilitrgtrate,r, 150mm"- Integrity an I true man mum of char- actnr. Ho ueemwatully rnsictm temp- tation when may mduccmenta to {kid to it" voiv. wvro presented to tim Rt showed his truv manlinl‘ns of character in refusing to take tut- vantuxw ot his master's oonfidettce to sin against him. Robert Meyers. of Sydm-y. was tat- nlly crushed against a Mam while driving Into his barn. The bominon Gnvarumont ts ln- ltaJLng the Mareoul system be- tween Belle lam and the mainland. Customs collections at Windsor for Septembor were $38,731. {min- crease of 3318.000 over the same month last year. Ford Ritchie, an American. who pleaded guilty of tour rotrtwries in London. is given the option of co- ing home or to prison. worldly advance-lent. He welt knew that to We the ”pend favor- Ite at an eastern Indy ot rank and fortune meant a life ot one and luxury. but he chose to maintain his 1ntettrttr. he temptation was re- pented. but he fled Com the tmpter ', sometimes the only “my to escape tqmptatlon: - -. Bitr floods are "ported in Spain. villages bola; inundated and many cottage, twrpt away. The. engagoment is announced of Lady Sybil Primrose, daughter of Lord Rosebery, to Earl Bounuhamp. The new wing of St. Jomph'a Hos- pital, Gunman. was formally opened. Montreal refinnrs haw reduced the price of wt ton ovum per 100 pounds. A new ship subsidy bill In being discussed by Itepubliean icadern in Boston. "o-r" of att If! in numbr was mainiy in manumcturr zinc. although this rim almwed an Increase in “all! int, while the better 'uhowlng as to amount marinara] in [trial cant] mic " n on: m min rein! Italians. One of the moat gratifying ‘fmtures of the year in the Dominio- l, was the practical immunity fro- i banking disastt-rs. l Provinces I 'ommerckl. Ontario NeswtoumitLid and utlwr dcpartmmstt' has been large; there has been " mun! die- trlbutlw huninrub dour m grocer- ies, and in hurdwn‘o lull and wintnr t?cialtits luw been uerlmg wry Ire-Ix. In human were is more u!- tthy in tho jbhhlm; traue. 'Ne royal (hit at the (zonal cities had (In) (inset of mimulullnqz trade in a. good many mun. Ines. and Jot» bers at Vancouver and Victoria Ind many mums: unions to fill an a re- Ett.t tho must two when. There in considerable activity in who-enh- clrcl-m at Witurpett In splu- of tha- ibarvrtit operations having been check.“ by me wen weather. Trade at Ottawa. It is handled try Brad- street'a. In ot increasing proportion.. The dnnanJ tor supplies for 'r.inttd river poltto and tor camp supplim. in now quite active. cumulon- Failure-s. It. G. Dun & (10. report Canadian. {allurm tor nine monle 1,009 In numb": against 1 0:4 last _ am " 1.7.32? m amount, again“ " 02:9 2.31 In mo Ttlan/in dean‘s-3 guano . . .. ' ritdatt Columbia Nova Swan. . . . .. Manitoba,....... New Brumorice, P. E. blunt”... Tho [all tradr, at Montrc.ul in (mow- ing otttgtiidettstrit, activity. an” the movement appelrs to be pretty well up to exp ctutionn. A Quebec whulo- duh trade us a rule report luminous mmuwlmt quiet smw tiw com- mt ncunugnt of Ur week. but this was (up-cud. Bu “was at 'Nromtrrttuy wech, rtrpt'atitctg' In dry goods. hm: Ueen quite active. Tnavellnru' or- ders can tor full lines o! "ettgoeta.trle [has to usmrt stacks lor tte In" an! winter, and cover a undo range mare has new quite an: increase- In the volume at trade at Hamilton, according: to limdntroct'n reports. The sorting ”utmost: in Mr) unodu and other derrtmmLts has been large; there has been u goo" dig- Winchester, Oct. 4.-At the molding of the Cheese Board to-day 813 boxes ware oftered, 1:30 white and 698 col cred. Tho highmt nth-n Nd was ltr toe both kinda, with no Halos. Ottawa, Oct. t..-At the Ottawa Cheese Board horr- uydny I,525 boxer of cheese were rogistcrcd. 1,010 ot white and 511’. boxes of ('olorttd. Only two buyors were present. lie-am: Binnie“ and McGregor. Who mum-st bid was 83-40, and only M troses of white wc‘rt' Hold. South Hut-h Oct. 4.--ittwotla.r meet uw: of Fino Cho4etett noun! “as lwld horn this ntwru-nn. Number at "hee- Insult-d. 2,171. 1,881 white, unnum- uoluru’]. Prim: altered on board 9c for colored and white. Atrrrat 3,000 Hold at. thin. Cite-r-Tito market In dull, with {innit “111!"th quota! at Mkt. and wax-nan at 9 3-412 General (been Morin". Forth, Oct. 4.-1n the cheese mar ket to-day thvre were 1,950 [mum white cheese, all September mama All were sold at from 9 to 9 I-Mic. The Hurt apple crop In Nova the Us ite not an mlmixul Nil. A our"- spomtettt In the Annapolis Valle: writes us that ulth-mzh tho crop ir but 60 per cvul. tho quality in texcel. lust, and the prior at ttr. orchard» ir $1 per burrvl. The new! "and. our tutormzwt says, have improved ali the late fruit and the pturture land. while there haw 1th yet been any {nuts to hurt. 41muumm lit-(cor Ivronu, Dairy Marten. Butter-The receipt» of ink-rim- butter comma! large. and lbw? 'sttai- mm are allow ol mum Choice grades in demand. We 'ttrote: Belmtud Ire-h made dairim. 16 t.r Wet ; choice bub. runs, My, ; second grades. in In": or tuba, Ls to llc, and bah-If. Lev. (‘rmmory firm: prints. 2.t to 22e: MIIMH, p., be. to 'iWe. - mam-Thu market in firm. We qucte: Rtrietly new laid, 16 In We frown can llvd, 14e ;aecondn, lo to HP Wheat-Prem, wrro humanoid. mo bushels of what soiling at 00 to Tte per bushel. 200 of rad at " to Tie per bushnl. and TOO ttoh- olg of goose gt 65 to 66c IbPr bathe]. HaF-Receipta “on! llght, " lands aelllng at $10 to $12 Toro- train. lurid-t. The mun-ht 10-day was brisk and prices generally renamed firm. though lemons decline-l ao, per box. Olfcrlngs were "glut. We quote: Peaches. per basket. Cantor-dc. Thr to 81.10; whites ao to We; yellow medium. 60 to 750.; pram. per Inu- ket. 25 to Giro, per barrel, $2 to $2.50; plums. per Inuit-t, 20 to 4Otr. 'qrtt plums. GO m 60.- per luntut. apples. per lunlmt. " to 350. per barrel 82 to $3; mueknwlmm, par crate 25 to Me.. per Met 15 to Lott; watcrmnlonn. each n to Mic: grapes. null basket. " to Mc, large basket 2G to 40:: Immune. per hunch. $1.25 to F..'.; lnmmm. per box, $3 to $3.50: oranges. [pr box, " to " ' (p001. Vrtces tor Apple-la Non. Neocla- forum» "r-rr" Market. Oct. 5.-Recelpu ot ttrain on W street market today were much [Utter than usual. Thu barley nu mostly taken to tho dictum-rho. leaving only about 1.500 bushels for the street market. "thits-Were study. 100 ballads selling at " to "c' per Make! for new. msriei--wat, firm and Rem-co. " 500 bushels selling at " to tmic per bushel. Dressed Hogtr--Wero cadet. the large supply having Its effect - the market. Thvy are now tsegthtq at__$8.7§ per owl. Rre--wtsrt Itnndy. too blahvll sell- ing at tue, per bushel. Total iv'ahtrom'u an I‘nuh No, 3519 I}! M ' 80 " “Elli-973, I 'ommemhl. tat.te'tt-ilielg . o I 'Nft's'r, 3.3%.”! few“ 3;: 32.5.1.5 iii.Tii Mt5,t04 an“ 241'!) m W 1:420 1orrttrtedi mar Em; k, k a

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