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Durham Review (1897), 24 Oct 1901, p. 3

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an In Nun-vi wrWEHI " m; fnmcn'trn “I! I. to. I.- -led. a?!" SANA“ D I...“ we... PI. ssL'F. NO. 43, 1 " sears "1ti ”" - _ T . ttsCharm nl, t ,- man“ he Continental lift Insurance Call M Your Complef e t mu u a... c".r."st"flata'ti't,'ddtttltt +1; myyg. Chum... W ppetite fails, it When food is its the burden, vs, ulose Resh,it by” w on of health. A ,or's: is hard ravy. it makes: Téronfo'. -7 '7"""' ”.003." qruqq%tn. limuision of (3" ' the food that mak- your stomach. V . mjoyment of Eh: men women - .'"'r'r"' ---'s y "r're<* C P.G. - W iiroiii,t,ijg8f, porfeot u"iil"iiaTiGauua" t rrrnm A0312?- E I‘DlCAL fall-0' be (In. a wutcd tn till dh {\(IGI. On I- , drat. Gaunt! .1 l .yIul - Chan.“ .1 u! this cowl! (all ham" of me". $011 - m. In mid to ers. and on...” p, Oil is the iovrnent o e it, and mung M m: an} " in edge ofthe k endis, foeq Ill Illa-lam ci,;"ip?,Fithiri?if n. " wttb. am In an Inf-.2 I III: a they rmatgtqt _e.r. Thanh: "oerthing ttt1drrrn 5.12:1 h. "as. c.- " may toe dun-3' "to . an“ Mtert an m Ikttranr, w TeiETAlt, - r h 'iiiiiSet4 elm. - I :m-r Y0“. " . NET PER vm tor eitsee, mad and EM nod-m - of cclhx§__ d mg: n by a“ m m VAN-id by , In" 7'14 I‘ll. a '3 'M- who h:- 9.10? "etperNrt" , 1 I load. I“ a mu- or M qCRRB., "My. and Y. HY mm" the 00‘! ll "you - u " nod-0‘...” TO on K” Ir) turn»: Good Pri. " t . M',t"l has! xseof " 'kariiy, A “all I ' 1Giiii. V f'stJll I Ct, a run-malice- rr-eat to m.- (tun-oycd but mde by (- ‘nxnrd 000‘“ whom Swain] u “C.- . usetut on luck "trt “in“ A II: " out 1331M LU ; " " atStn 190;! - -.--= CJ, “I ‘ "d is In. "r his. lt my a: ruminant. I uric um " it h at r but." , Illa-In. Mn”. 59 toe “I Mb". tttttr' Car" that!“ no. of " mt" waning I usa' " "O It food. "Out. life a: 33 an ”or, re my no“ we? “In! mm " I: “use tant ”n: U and " In “MY“ tl u for thr “bl! Cf." - “Vin; a w A mm “ I, an: NE W -i"t'" " "sited rt "' dlgtet" " El 1153 m1 has rrtattgemtgtieat and” 1's geometry fetches {hm it, and Is agar", or it h a math. or " rhoatboirt. or In noun - it has mnemuiv al nynre. Now. remit 'a that m the mum Net am - I arm-m y in more summnnn aria! aunt-icy. aoau amt-u- m rt. God's law cant. God'. W t God" "unusual-n at the vol-Id t Never rotttttigsq wrong than count. the If. m and the I and the and. and the cycles. providence. never “all. with crpendicularly when that: prov- cos ought to be oblique. not tat- y when they aim to be verti- mummy In our “to an“ out any Mutiny or nul- T Duh life a .tx-treaded m. x at the rum tun; dying at the L time. Then no no "la-mu In our Undo". " I thou!“ In. a “Mod whom, I rd in in d-tr. God u not. w own. but, order. ”mum. Hon. 3 perfect mum. I Mac: aisle. ' perfeat rhombold. a; w- cirete. The edge of God'a robe uvornmem never trays out. There no loos» acre" tn the world's many. " did not Jun happen Napoleon was mica with to- Imn a Borodin no that ho be- I nnnn'nblllcnl foe the day. It Mtt. It: " 03- rd .. ‘r-s our blindneu. then and my ,, 4:11p" “”11!!me tin rt '1. ‘LHN'LI Bible. AU the Bttta:re ' ‘ ":5- Bible com out--- Bi. 'he Ir .n'mln of the " Pia- l the r'vr,' 'a.n of warped: Olivet, 'IO'UE'J 'i " Anstmrtl-on: Ca'nrary. 'ltoummv. F a.“ mm All the rivers to my, , s".,' unqqlidekel. or the '01 r-or. . ,.2 beauty: Jordan, or “her of 'r,"," shrisrn; (month, or tttver n! i" athellC amply: Nile, or "her or i . we; and the pure river .2 trom \In‘li-r the throne, clot! ti Mat. WILLA reading this Blble. . Mtr eyes have been touch“ by be, We fsnur I: an (lament. tttd .CPth cry Ls, now with crxteittxion tt tad nun with new: W- tltt apnoea In some " In. I“ n tar as I can cont t---ttte N at. am. the Cumin. the Con- . the Conqueror, the “I. nnd In.“ any and” " - to Tug-um: m3 Ice KIM a.“ “It Ja.,. _ Mimi. In will! - tttttt of "I that otttttt and dim " that looted more. ip and the 13" that x were never hard of mucus! pm. I " geometry my be. tt" We more mummy: (“My Job VII crystal ctttnot d,% ent ent for the day. " happen that John anatomy. on a ho:- “an; tor u outttt " another mirtqio-e' can. place. I "an! that rior to the and I. n; shawl-s Inn- at which you m1! a La bid out with - any earthly city. There 7 (-rynumutlon and w '.y calcined. Every Job "vtt nnot mull It." . part of my mate late the crystal. who In (Vain mine or x Mammoth can. or the pendan- of an palace. The an“! a mountain; it ll the 6‘, tt h the “m of m heaven in (he an. Mel chemist at all- announce the latter the former. but Job 'ont 0WD”. looks hen not: At the cry.- ” the former a: of " to the Inner. e!- words of my text. i that religion b In- and In 1mm!- en or by whom (his ed. Bend- of it Mve e tomb ot Alexander " n are brought up , Hercuhneum. - 'nmenu made out at o-th- tam-laments hed to the mummies t many commentators rt! mean. (kl. What rout the cryml'! The adow to keep out the the day: the crystal defending its Genet“ Hun-In- m to gee the rm an more Interest. he use Cryltll- ant to show you when. an“ retiq- tho anal In the hat the former ta Id beauty than the I tt to I." the 9.0- ns. declarln' "The you know I!!! the! It he became the! uni man receive!!! d been”! they aro 'd." There In no ysta'.. The trouble hich try to iootr y tor vision. Lord, b- opened! When t‘The chum at u by Dr. Tm nut-ted Mid win- mompl recognition. I lake up the In. 5, in my teat. con- t with I -trnen of His character. won. 1sutdeiq all Rouen and n nothing Io as ht our holy atom remn- F ere Ind you n, his dentin!- rou an - His rturraeter. an of the and thoax " "I am the when. and the teeth of the wild hm must that erhtd me boron t can become pure bread for Jan. Christ." Or the company at such men an "that enctent Cttrutian mean” who, when atandln‘ In the mull: of the “minimum? walling for the “one to come out of their ave 1nd destroy him end the people in the "lterten net-In: and ttttouting, "The "one!" replied. “Let them come on.'" and then, atoovlnl’ down town! the twwe where the wild We were roaring to get out, tum vrled. "Let them we on.'" Ah. yes. lt it, persecution to put you in glottal:- God in not mm; a. put you down. Now you understand why you loot that child and why you but your property. It was to prenu- you for eternal (ms- uros. And why sickne- came, " bolus the procqu of Immortal munc- cenrr. And now you 11an why they lied thou: you and tried to drive you hither and thither. It wt. to put you in the glorious commy of Inch men n Inuit”, who. when he went out lit be destroy"! by the Mom, aid. company, and while there the may (Mnn that you will have to “you to the future world for exphmlon I tell you that It ta the whoh undue: of your rennet: to mature! and uphill and interpret 1nd Illumlne and lde- ate Job m right. It In A gloriou- trtutrmsreney. "The crystal cannot equal it." People wk too much wont their I'QODR tam too much mot their era-a, W not enough sham their CrRtwnr. Do you know that the Bible men-{lone n crxhq. but seventeen than. while it mentions a crown eighty times? Aah the! old mu what he think: ot religion. He haa been I close uneven He he. been cultivating In aesthetic mote. its bu seen the sunrises of heir n century. He has been an My riser. He has been an mm of come“ and corals end nil kinds of beautiful (him. All: him whsnt he think.- of religion, and he will tell you: "It is the molt beautiful thing I ever new. The cm- tat Cannot count it." Beautiful in it; symmetry, When it presents God's character. it does not present hint 0 having love like a great protubennoe on one aide at his nature, but meta an ion.- in harmony with " Junk-H love that win occept oil that! who come to him. and s. Justice that will by no - ole” the guilty. Benutirul religion in the oentlment it implants! Beautiful religion in the hope that it Undies! Beautiful miUion tn the Net that it proposes to Mend and emhmne and enthused-e on im- mortal spirit. Solomon any: " is I lily. Paul says " is n crown. The Apocnly'pe any. " in ' fountain kissed by the sun. Eneltlel an it is n folinged coder. Christ any: it to a bridegroom come to fetch home A bride. While Job in the text token up n whole vane of oration “moo-the to”: and the sawhtre and the ettryqop--he hold- out of this handful use Just one crystal end holds " up until it gleam- in the worm light (I the eastern sky. and be ex- canm-z '"rhe crystal ccnnot emu] it." Oh, Lt is not a. male religion; it is not a stupid religion; it is not a tooth- iens hex. " some seem to lave mm- sentmi it; ft u not a Meg Merrill” with shriveled arm come to some the world; it is the “inst daughter of God. heir- as of all his wealth; her cheek the morning eky. her voice the music of the south wind, her step the dance ot the per Come and woo her. The Spirit and th' Pride say come, and whosoever will, let him come. Do you agree with Solomon and say it in; a lily? Then of the depths ‘ These 'routa I" a mercy. He puts th them in the We.“ vane. He we": that m nailed, m pierced. on th Again, mlkion is superior to me cry-ml in in transtortmsuotue. The diamond is only a oryouuiissittton. Car- bonite of lime the: until it becomes calcite or tannin. Red oxide of cop- per cr.vatV into cubes and octahe- dram. Those crystals which adorn our persons and our homes and our mu- seum- hu‘e only been resurrected from farms that were hr from lustrous. Scientists for Ices have been enmin- in; these wonderful trtuurgormatiotur But I tell you in the gospel of the Son of God there is c more wonderful (mm- formation. Over soul; by meson of sin block a: coal and bud " iron God. or bin comforting (nee, “oops and _----- an." Aha]: be mine in the dary myjr-WPLF. PPC'..'"-"'"-" Where pin abounded [a more abound. The cam solitaire. "The crystal on Now, I have no iikii people who are always Christian meetings abo dissipation. Do not to "cult", my brothers. you were sick. but ma of your ulcers. The trade of some mini-ton Worku- Iecuu to be crin- nnd dissipation. " New you will a at qthMtdtqat' um not. I " m: comforting III-SUP. gays, “They and; be mine when I make up my 'erred" “what" ny you. "Will on Fer main}; rhetoric. miners and Gunman to be Mr curly plum“. The number mm! and the number "ole unklx very 900' mark. - thet, ke hand; with W hile I pronounce y t "Oh." on someone. "it is jut the doctrine I want. God in to do every- thing, and I am to do nothing." My brother, " is not the doctrine you want. The coat makes no rettigrtattee. It hears the resurrection voice in the mountain and it comes to crystallisa- tion; but your henrt resins. The trouble with you, my brother, is the coal want: to any cool. I do not ask you to throw open the door and let Christ in. I only ask that you stop bolting and barring it. My friends, we will have to get rid of our sins. I will have to get rid of my sins, and you will have to get rid of your one. What will we do with our sins among the three crystals? The r-ryutnl atmosphere would display our pollution. The crystal river would be betouled with out touch. Transforma- tion must take place now or no trans- formation at all. Give sin full chance in your heart and the transformation will be downward instead of upward. Instead of crystal it will be I cinder. But, my friends, the chief transform- lng power of the gospel will not be seen in this world. and not until heav- en breaks upon the soul. then you will Bee the Mauls. What a tttttttttteen, netting for these JeWels of eternity! I mime. hour people representing heaven in a way that is far from at- trsotive to me. It seems almost a vul- gar heaven as they represent it, with [rest btotchea of color and bands of male making a deafening racket. John represents heaven u exquisitely beautiful. Three crystals! In one piece he says. "Her light was like a precious stone. clear as crystal." In another place he says. " saw a pure river from under the throne. Near an crystal.“ In another place he says. "Before the throne there was a sea ot glue Near as crystal." Three crys- tals! John says crystal atmosphere. That means health. Balm of eternal June. What weather after the world's can nind! No rack of storm clouds. One trrath ot that air will cure the worst tubercle. Crystal light on all the lesves. Crystal light shimmering on the tops: of the temples. Crystal cht toning in the plumes of the equotrians ot haven on white horses. But "the crystal cannot equal it." John says crystal river. TStat means Joy. Deep and ever rolling. Not one drop or the Potomac or the Hudson or the Rhine to soil it. Not one ear of human sorrow to embitter it. Cult“. the rain out ot which it was made. (has). the bed over which it shall mil end ripple. Crystnl, its infinite surface. But "the crystal cannot equal it." John ony- crystal see. The: means multitudinously vast. Vast in "inure. Rapture vast as the sea. deep as the sea. ever changing as the sea. Biliow: of light. Billows of beauty, blue with skies that were never cloud- ed and treen with depths that were never lathomed. Arctios and Antar- tics and Mediterranean. and Atlantic- and "cithca in crystalline magnifi- cence. Three crystals! Crystal light falling on a crystal river. Crystal river rolling into a crystal sen. But "the crystsl cannot equal it." "Oh," says someone, putting his hand over his eyes. "can It be that I who have been in so much sin and tumble will ever come to those crys- tals?" Yes, it may be-At will be. Heaven we must have, whatever we have or have not. and we come here to get it. "How much mm 1 my for it?” you say. You will pay for " Just as much as the coal peys to become the diamond. In other words, nothing. The same Almighty power that makes the crystal in the mountain will change your heart which is harder than stone, for the promise is, "I will take may your stony heart, and I will give you a heart of tieerh." In the days of Carthage a Christian girl wascondemned to die for her faith. and a boat was bedaubed with tar and pitch and filled with combustible: and set on tire, and the Chrictian girl was placed in the boat, and the wind we: onshore. and the boat ttoated away with its precious treasure. No one "an doubt that boat landed at the " dueouraree, other Christian people Who never trot drunk or stole uny- ttttne. But it In pleasant to know that those who were farthest down have been brought highest up. Out of Infernal aerfdom into eternal lib. Orly. Out of darkness into light. From coal to the solitaire. "The crysul Ola-In. --..-. '- .. cannot equal shore ot heaven. Sin wants to put you in a ttery boat and move you " ln an opposite mrection--ott from peace, of! from God, " from heaven, everlastingly oft, and the port toward which you would sail would be a. port ot darkness, and the guns that would greet you would be the guns of despair, And the "trs that would wave at your arrival would be the black ttttarts of death. on, my brother. you must etther kill sin or sin wlll kill you! It is no exaggeration when I say that any man or woman that want! to be mum: mav be saved. Tremendous any man t saved may choice! A In; this and doesn't darkness. "no you am sitting there': tectire. "Well, gift of heel": and at wtll. Tours usn IleIu to Theatrical Man- 'ttters. "Do you um- that woman In black sitting there l'" said u railway de- tective. “Well. she possesses the rare gift of being able to cry naturally and at will. ' “If one was a group of well dressed men in a station waiting for a train cho’ll sit or stand very near them . I _--t--.. “-0 Inna-v In “Crying at will don't undtsrsmnd. I _ women cry on the woman's cry is muelt thing. She dose not chief to her eyes " keep! her face well u If. her tears mlll cheek! that all may can cry anywhere." The idea. of aertdl: all“ an “un- "if (who when " grnup of well drt-ssed men in a ntntiun waiting for a train she’ll sit or stand very near them and burnt ottt crying. Tho story in that ulte- lmR no money to buy a tickot to gut to her dying daugh- ter in the m-xt town. "Crying at will is something I don't understand. I have seen many women cry on the stage. but this “man's cry is muclr nearer the real thing. She does not hold a handker- chief to her eyes at all. She just keep! her face well up and gobs free- ly. her team mum: down her . __..- ”m0 all may use them. She can or; an" TWI"""" The Men. of sending sobbing wo- men into ttttdiem- at theatretr has rcvently been foam] try London Inl- axon; of small theatres to be a. pay-, ing muhthm. and at the [Intent the donors of women can: at least one milling per evening by dubbing at outed "titervesls in the pay - A-"Tt _ x A SOB FOR A SHILLINU. " U thousand people are choos- moment between salvation Mien. between light and between charred win and mar people represeuttng way tint In far from at- e. It seem- almost a vul- w they represent it, with as ot eotor and bands of II I deafening racket. Id. and not until heav- the soul. then you will . What I. nuurnmeent Haatlc her pllce he says. there was a sea ot ram.” Three crys- cryntal atmosphere. Joseph and "In Brothren.-thm. " catmnsprttarr.--omnesstt" Llnkl. Tito fertility or the land ot Egypt ls dependent upon the annual over- flow or the river Nlle. The waters deposit on the land a. rich loam Which is brought down from the mountains; nnd it in this deposit Which may be considered as con- ntltutlnz tho wealth ot Egypt. This wilt expiuin the causes of the Devan years of plenty; and it was be- cause the Nile did not overflow that tlw‘lnnd suffered from famine. The tamino noon reached Hebron and Jacob's lumily wore on the borders of atnrvathm. Jacob had heard that thorn was com in Egypt, and he accordingly aunt ten of hit: some thither to buy grain. When Joseph's hrothrvn came they bowed down tw- fore him and he knew than. But he nppoaral strange unto them and denounced them an spies and nhut tlwm up in primu tor three days. In their trouble. they remembered thoir past sins and what they had dunno to Joseph. Rnuhen told his brothers how he had tried to saw Joseph, and Joseph understood It all, [or tlwy supposed they were talking in n tonguo unknown to him. Ho finally aunt nil his brethren home but Simeon, whom he Iropt in prison. Tlmy “gain nondml Porn but could not return without Ben- Jarmn. Jacoh at lirut remand. hut nnaliy (marinated to send him. Til-3y took for the Egyptian governor many presents and double, money When Joseph saw his own brother Benjamin ho was greatly nitected; a least was made for his brethren; their such: were. tilled with porn: tho money they had brought wnn put in them, and in Benjamin's sack was put a silver cup. After they were outside the city, Joseph ordered his steward to bring them back and Benjamin was elmrgml With stealing tho. cup. Judah made a no- ble and touching ulna which rc- venled his character to Joseph. This last rroul-aorrowirut supplic'l- tion wan "tore than Joseph could hear and Ito took immediate stops to rou‘nl himself to his brethren. 1NT'KR.Na'rtuh'At, LESSON wo. w 0010mm 27, won. Sunday School. I. Jowph--Jotreph in now 39 ymlrn did; he had been in Egypt 22 years and had boon Governor ot Egypt nine years. Could not retrain--") Hebrew word in Tpry emphatic and ktgtrtinmt to force one’n self. to uo something against naturv. Joseph coma no longer constrain him-w". 2. Want alouu--Prom the (unless of highly excited emotions. "This Is tho usual way in which Orientals express excited tttelirtgs."---Ptt1pit Clan. TTessrd--'rhbe mar mean the servants who may have been within the mud of his voicm-ur "the weeds may only signify that tho report was brought to Pharaoh‘s house." V. 16. a I tun J-rptt--Ttto natural voice. the native tongue. the lung remem- bered (endures. would ull at unm- atrike the apprehension of the hm- tiurrtr.--Murphr 'rroublod--They he- truyed their terror by shrinking us far 88 ther could from My presence. Tho memory of the sins they hml committed against Josvph camp upon them with great force. 4. Home near to mc-Nb, invites than! to,Hin free favor. So our Jouplvh in the roam] bids up: come to Him." The ml "1'8888215 is,, “Come to Me." tt is “in ('ntrcuty of love. Sold into Fat.rpt-It was impossible to t.svtuits allusion to their onrlywickmi- new. but this Joseph does in a spirit not or angry upbrnlding. but of elevated piety and tonuer char- it.v.--Pulpit Form. G. Bo not grievmr--"rl" tspoke of thvir having: mid hint-not to wound their for-ling“. but to convince them (If his idvmity: and then to roux- kmrp, their minds. he traced the agent-y of an overruling Providence in his exile and present honor." Did Bend ttte--"' hand their mil to accomplish “is purpose." 8. Fathor to Phtrraoh--"rTuepr1tr- cipal counsellor of stat». and to have the authority, respect and power of n father with him." 6. Noun" bo oarutg--"Bhall ho neither plowing nnr hnrregrt."-R. V. "Ear" is an old English word [nuan- mg to plow, T. Great doMverance - That Im that yam who are now but a hand- tut, camping this drug”. might grow gate a vast tnultitrtde.--Bonson. th Go up to my Fathor--'Wo do- lees that Mn father might speedily he made glad with the lidlnga of his life and honor." 10. land of Gannon -- Probably this district had been allotted to Joseph by tho king ot Jhrypt, our we can mmely think ho couid have pmmbrd It so positively, without first obtaining Pharaoh's contmett.-.. Clarke. 11. Nourish thwu~lt is the duty of children. if tho nvomwity of their [mrenta down at any time require it, to support and mpply them to tho utmost of their "buit.v.--Henry, And thy household~ln verse. 18 Jon- t-ph arm-aka ot "their household." allowing that each of the putrlarcha had now hln own family, besides the still larger ramily bolonging to Ja-. ooh. 12. My tnrmth--Up to thla time he had apnknn to 9mm through mm in- torprmor. but now hat speak: in the Hebrew tongue. 13. All my ttlory--Ho cabins this not out of pride, but from love to his aged futhvr. knowing what pleasure it would give him. 14. Ho, twottwr-Benyuntrt was ther only Otto who was lull brother toiroeph.. .. .. . .. . 1,'5,--KrmarNl all his brotluu,n- AN a um of love and torg:ivr'netetr. Talked with liim-Th:sy wire now at rust. the past fut-gnu". the prcsrmt full of hopp. and thtxy could now tell the thousutnd tluuuw Jusoph wluhul to know about them. and learn his his, tory from him a) as to repeal; the max-whats tal" to their father. IottAC'I'IL'AL SURVEY. The time had Comf‘ for Joseph to I aka himself known ', he could wait no Hanger. . Joseph forgave him brethren. Their RUN-l were gnu-at. but the grace of God in Joseph's hem-t enabled him to for- uvo great ulna. Joseph loved hitr brethren. no wept - them and kissed than all. How sublime the scene. There in no lplrlt at revenge. Small Coul- alone hold you“. no desired his brews-on to some net: to him in order that he and»: null: hll love - “on. loam: pm“ for ha Huron. 1-15. Joseph rmembered hll father. "Both my father yet live t" How touching! He had not seen his father tor twenty-two yearn. and he wan union. to learn of " wel- lam He knew also what n joy It would he to his father to learn that he was alive and enjoying Inch great Uiaunetiorttr. HI! love lad him to make immodlau‘ mapanuon for their temporal slum-s- un“ Joceph at once told them that they were to have tho very twat tho {and titrorued. Nothing was! to“ good tor them. Our Jun-mph think» the lame with record to the rumors whom he has come to cave. Joseph honored God. Joseph. unnu- forgot God. He always gave Him the glory. When called before Pharaoh tto can, "It he not tn me; God shall glvo Pharaoh an answer of peace." Gert. XII. 16. To his brothrnn he sold, "Be not grieved .........rr. for God did send mo below you to preserve lite" Ttttr word sent to his {other was. "God hath tttttdo mu lord of all "God Egypt Thoughts. ~~ "Joeeph'tt method u! troatntent man-h hlu wisdom. We mm In his nation: a. type of the Spirit's work upon tho hearts of “In Huh victor]. 118teir ingratltmlv. Hulr wickednm and long continued hatred worn all forglvpn. forgotten, vast hm hind his hark. Thorn in only nlw nan-nun Y) transcends this. in my mind, an that in Calvary. whore w:- m-ar that voice crying out, 'Fnlhvr. fund"! 1hmn.' " an much heat can I human being stun! t _ _ Thou-India of Hamiltonian. nah-d themselves this question when thet- momeurrq rngistered 98 degrees. n..- nyatun ot a normal person can on» (him who that much. It to qulto [lmibla to tone lt; up to with-tam] om degrees of head. Nowhere In the world due. the will: hunt hvg'm to tspproactt man‘s capacity for rmriatanee. In Death anlt'y, Cal., the thermometer Inna raglan-rad 140 degrees Fahrenheit. 'nu, ordinnry ma." can and due. ad- Mt hlmue" to Ilta climate in “It”. In the UMP? room of n, dozen buihV lnp in the skyscraxwr district the. heat from the boilers in Intomw (mud) to Cook nn- cgg haul In ten minute! if it is laid on the [low six feet away from the turnace. Firemen work In this ntmmphorn your after your wltimut visible harm. Women walk in tho oven" " tho La Roche- {vacuum butt-rim ot Franz-o when the oveno nro hmtul to "un dvgroen. - Btohere in hip: stmmnhipu work In an average tcntperattir" n! from 100 to 190 (burrow. 7 7 -- A The educated lrrak, Clinhert, the. Fire King. used to enter an own: which ranged from 400 to 600 de- grees Fahrenheit. I A common modern remedy tor a rheumatinn is in the baking ot the l, body in an asbestos tub hosted at I 226 dogma. I Nobody knows what taken pheri in tho human system under the urea- of mxnatrokr. Dr. Samoan. of Lon-I don, the greatest authority upon the l qua-Hon. pronoun?" sun-troka an infnctiouo disease. Be say. it in due I to n. micro-organism. True 'pdl-.'! stroke, says Dr. Snmbon, in unknnown l in Europe. It does not occur in; Central America or in the high table ) lands of the United Staten. ', The limit of what one may endure in the way ot solar heat is, of course. I however, far trom that at whichi normal health is more or as: in dan- I lzed to so tinrce a temperature and I has no chance to become an owing to l the comparatively short duration of I the heated periods. l "Be condescending always to “i wife: Idle liken it." 1 "hurry mooh,' ho run. “Do not. take It mrixmly." But he hasten to" and: "It in bard to be the widower) of a good wife. No man war wan; widower to a good widow," with!!! in more comforting. Many men are “mind how women should be treated to get the but that J. in them out. Obendagn haw his own khan. Ile says: V The chief ten-on for thls is. un- turally, that the human system in the temperate when " not acclimat- lzed to so nurce a temperature and has no chance to Momma an owlng to tho comparatively short duration of the heated periods. Colored mom can mduru more hen than white new. , 7 The doctors declare that anything above 85 degrees in u tempertstet'li- mate, such an that whieh llamiltun ls supposed to (enjoy, constitutes " menace. "Some women must be won in tho sun; other» In the tthade. Judge them by their eyes and not by their Mn. as some bum quicker in tho shade than when in the sun. Varied Method" to Use. "Slap mo. pinch others, never put them unless to save a word. "Talk little to women ', lluton much. They talk tor many and [Men fur few. "Better to my,“ a woman {war you than to think shn can wave " toga to a Hove behind your back. A warm admires a lion that will out her me than a monkey that will chatter for her peanuts. "rho wink is not known in Senn- gul: we do not blink at the sun or at earn other. What we see We see. What is we we; what in not other countriw can wink at. - But when It comma to profuudlty of obervatlou. the following bit of supreme window appears to us to take the cake: ”Many women would rather one ot tlttr-tiva wives tun one "Fittrrivo wives urn like a long journey. When the traveller wear- it‘s he can rest by the wayuide in the moonlight. "The loss clamps a wife wears tho more Rho has to hlde in her head it she wand keep it Runyon. Clothes are foolish; tut'oing ls tar more ornamental. and dorm not (shale. Tailors are Ilka monkeys' tails, goon only for hanging. "What ls art? I never saw it he- (on: I came here. In Senegal art as I see lt in this country would be for n. ”may to hang by Its tail in a. oocoanut tree and make all tribes believe it was a. mu in high mstrerrttrth" "in that brief sentence Obendagn m up his knowledge of the goat- ler “I. . Who'd care to be a bee and dp Sweet honey from n flower'a up. When he might be a fly, and ateer and ttrqt into new ot but? of MJLJtdLOJLMJl. Af. "i-ci":""')'"?"""".)""'")'"'?"')"")"): Toronto Furmrru' Muck“. Oct. t9.--'rradr WJI brink on the gtretrt market to-dr: y. Grain rp- relplu wvm IK-nx-icr. 5900 bushels uttering. Wheat wan stead). 100 washcl- ot white selling at 'ra to TO.: per build. 200 bushels ot ted at " per hnslml. and GOO bushels of gauze It 63% to 663 per bushel. Rarlcy mm a. allmdo “run-r. "mu .0"an at Gt to GN, and {rod 11' MPa' to .'Uc per Imam-l. Three Lhou Barley In" a allude nrmer, malt calling at " to GN, am! teed n! 495‘ to .'ur. per bushel. Three than: mill hushwla altered. Onto wrm new}; 2,000 bulimia pulling at 39% to 'IU' per induct Rye wan steady. "n Imam-l! ”mm: It Gie per bulll'l. Drum-d hogu wen easier. not! at:- now trellis-g at " to $8.10 per "wt. Hay was oturicr, 2.5 loam. selling!!! $10.50 to $12. t4traw---'rwo loads uf looso straw wild at $8.50. lotus-w Fran "site". not. 19.--Titer" WM " fair demon" lay-day tor fruit of all kinda, and trade wan fairly hrlsk. Prices were Mendy. Wo quote: Pancho“. pet musket. ('rawlurds. TGc to $1.10. white, IX! to 50:; yellow mulla- no to 6Ge; {mm per basket. " to 50.2. per barrel F..' to $2.50; phi-I. per basket. Mc; npplen. Per basket. " to 250. per Dual-rel t",u' to “l crane». mull basket 20 to Me. Ir, to 250. per barrel .S,u' to .8; grapes. cum" lush-t 20 to 2tie. lam bucket 2755 to 4Oe; human. per hunch. $1.25 to .2; lemons-per box, $3 to 3.1.50; Cantor-um lemon! per box. $4.50 to $5: (rungs. per box, " to $5; cranberriel. par ha- ket " pnr barrel 'tr, 'tttinert per Wankel. 30 to 40:2. per harrnl $2.76 General Choose Marten. Incision. ont., Oct. Mt.-At (W's market new-a [notorie- "ttered 1.185 boxes September chemo. ".'r white and 990 colon-d. Sales, 175 at 'ol-ar. I"). at 9 3-80. Canton. N. Y., not. {Bu-{~30 chain ft 1-40 ; (Winn to #82. Batter Bellesi'de, Oct bun-d 10-day :5 colored and 2 Haiti. Mrs at ft ‘Wug. N 451 boxcar ot rm urn-rm for large no calm. (in our than! pricey. to Cmrnnavilh‘. ow.. Oct. It). _ At Ute HnmPrn Towmmlp Bum! ot Train have 10-day. 36 factories "tered 1.970 box"; citoeaw, tour vrvamerit. offend 123 but: butter. A. J. Brier !nught TV, mm». chats-iv at 91-40: and 781 baxm at 914%; ulna tm human humor nt 211-2n J. Odell naught 395 buxao (-hmv at 'ortt. 21r do bun-k: do cum I amiss. per 0 . given. per h Hmm, ehoices, Hogs, "or" f: Hogan. light, I Hoes tat, pe Export mug. t-holco. prr do medium. . Export mvwa,..... .. Buwhers' “we. etet BERNIE attic. C holes. Butrt"trieattle, fur. .. do common doeown ..- . _ do bulls ....-.._ p" Bull's, export. lteat y. pen Bulls, export. light. per " loads". chantoop _ do medium _ ._. _ do light . V Stocks: Low lo Limit» . otl’color- ml bulk . F Mitch on“. owl: .. lair. a “and; We qt ITC; t "ecoud quote I freeh l mums. New Y‘ Toledo Detroit Detroit Duluth. Duluth. Th" cmditi-me (vi “lmlvnaiu trade at Mimirmll thin won-k ttttso been ut- iMuctrrry. Tlt" " hl'pivouc-ra report . can! diatrilvutiw demon! lo Mr! ro- lull stocks fur tits. {all and winter (radix At Que-Im- tho "tl'th wontho'r of the unit inc-mum: has hem hone- ficiul. In trade rim-Ion activity it trtill notice]. and with tlie first toucit n! cold wmtlwr a big: drlnund [or [wavy goods is oxpmlod. There in. bor- uumc- activity in wholeazue trade at Toronto thin wook. The cooler wen- ttmr ttno trttmttitttml the demand tor heavy in" and winter gum. Mylo-nu at Hamilton thin week nu been fairly active. Traveller. an sending- in numnruus and large or- ders tor the sorting trade. and the prwem notivlty prom1rP* to mudd- erubly incl-mm with the tint touch ot winter weather; Trad!- tit WID- nipeg. not-(mung to ““08 to Brad- atrwt'n. is showing nubh activity. There are 'meuetrtttrtntt sign- of the intprovemt'rrt ot trade at we ot “A. (giant Penn-ms. Tie bbbinx undel- very fair in min“ departmentl. the retailers being nuw anxiouu to nor: “in: tor the patient sea-on. nud- nm at London Nu - -rdreastet.r who this wank. Badma- nt Otta- wa In. Men good. Cheese--'] with an Inn “Toronto grand jury at there oettt ”to": am“! the sync-Lib m d the huh tor "new A“ to A “cry " circulated to the otteet (Int " rich strike ot gold In“ taqetB and. on the new (kn-dun Norther- I! Per Port Frances. ' King Vlcmr Emmanuel has inform- ed the IIuIItm-s that there Is a pmmerttitltr of an lu-ir being horn next lay. In" Br, troxrm “son bought 1 b-ic. ['mnl port Toronto Llu- Stork Martel " to I k erortrt p, bedding Wheat Marketa. owing an" eluding quotations at tant win-.11. control: 1041:,» , Toronto Dairy Brad“ not 'n cm Tr Aide. " toit red .. whit: (Had per tl M. I'.t.--At our ohm- 'd." tnvtorurorrered 1W 2:150 white chair. ft 1-44. ' lr " - were boarded ; 9c land 9 tAc In: twin I) Lilli huh! my“ at 1:01 is firm. tre no“ "aid, 18 to Me; to Hie gsecond-I. Mte. arVt is unclaimed. hhinn’ hits at 95' to 1rd per cm er cgrt I chm 9 3-161- bnxm 74] 74 70 I Mnrlu-I- a $tt00 3 N 2 on , an butler at a mount. tt ii” tOtt 3) (I) Ill MI (I) m 50 " “my I'm-am m s. L", mark" i-ntiful. to a) w to w to to I. to to to to to to to to to In to "'" Dun 70 7 " l fl)" sw, "(I I" I” I“ SUI 00 If. be

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