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Durham Review (1897), 15 Oct 1903, p. 8

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pteiniy. 2BB drlh.c6,.20cd 4. .151 C Of the Tistory of the banking house of Smith, Payne, and Smiths a good deai of information has lateâ€" lIy fortbhcoming, thanks to the inâ€" dustry of Mr. H. T. Easton. The firm is remaittable as being until lately the oldest of its kind in the United Kingdom, and as having, in ‘the persons of one family, carried on business for over two hundred years The bank, indeed, has had a reputation over a long period of his. tor ns second to none. Branches of Bmith‘s bank were established at Lincota in 1775. at Hull in 1874 ; and at Newark in 1638, the latter i in nein@ndntaPD mc 7 a royal personage seized a considerâ€" erable amount that was lying there, and in this incident bankers found a powerful incentive to take care of their own cash. The bill of exchange was, in turn, the natural outcome of a condition of things under which there was considerable risk In conâ€" veying large amounts of cash from one part of_the country to another. Of the Tistory of the banking house of Smith, Payne, and Smiths on tThe latter. It used to be the Iashion to send money for safety to the mint at Tower Hill, but one day U " NNE escccars hss ies PP tGeorge Grote, the historian, lived over the bank in Threadneedle street â€"lor west end mansions or suburâ€" ban residential estates were not the the rule in those daysâ€"and it was here that he wrote his "History of Greece." Another of the Grotes {inds linds his portrait, by Sir Joshua Reyâ€" nolds preserved in the bank‘s parâ€" lor. The history of the Grotes would alford many _ an interosting chapâ€" ter, for they must have been estabâ€" lished in Lordon not many years afâ€" ter the goldsmigh‘s had gradually evolred themselves into bankers by lirst of ail acting as money changâ€" ers and then conceiving the notion ol borrowing and lending money, alâ€" lowing one rate of interest on the former ang JcCrarging another rate on the Ialfpr‘ Th siceudh : dase es S sk titse of Dimsdale, Fowler, Rarnard & Dimsdale. The name of _ Prescott naturally occupies a prominent poâ€" sitlion in the records of the comâ€" bined firms. _ Mr. Charles Prescott, who had been a. partner for many years, and who died not rery long ago, was the first chairman of the amailgamated enterprise. ‘The memâ€" ory of the Grotes is still affectian. Prescott‘s Runk was first estabâ€" lishod in â€" Threadnecedle street, in 1766, under the style of Prescott, UGrote & Co. â€" There were, as inevitâ€" ably nappens, a good many changes In the course of years, and eventually the firm came to be known as Presâ€" cott, Cave, Buxton, Loder & Co. Dimsdale & Co. took up banking busiâ€" iss some four years calier than the firm with which they were destined scor to ama‘gamate. They woere siluated at 50 Cornhill, the preseant olfices of Prescott‘s PRank. This house was originally known by the sign of the Golden Helmet and the Golden Bear, and when Prescott‘s and Dimsdale‘s threw their fortunes together it became their joint habiâ€" lation. One might run thronch a »000,000. 1t is oniy of late that Union Pank has acquiesced in a _ l¢y ol coutbination. PFrobably it l mJ occasion to invite anything 1 the kind, for it c‘aims to have ine first business in London, the xsl business with America, and a rapidly _ increasing business with Gurima ny. Gere origa. Its prospectus was sued in January, 183v, at which im€, lt appours, there were only ree Joint stock banks in the moneâ€" y capital of the wworld. ‘The bank ems to have been largely of Scotâ€" h origin. It originally â€" began Iness at 8 Moorgate street, but 1840 removed to its present premâ€" «, 2 Princes street. The nominal pital of the andertaking at the 1 it was created was £3,000,000. ~_ recently annouanced amalgamaâ€" i will bring the amount up to ,000,000. It is oniv of Intsa that the bank‘s parâ€" the Grotes would interosting chapâ€" have been estabâ€" to be the _ _"Books are made of paper, and alâ€" | though it is commonty surposod that | paper comes from rags, as a matter | of fact most of the papor used for ! books is mace Trom woodâ€"pulp, and | this of cours»e is mace from trees. | The total sale of nine popular novels | has boen given as 1,6©0,000 volumes; | and, taking the average weight of | each as boing twenty ounces, we arâ€" | rive at a total of two million pounds | of paper. An average spruce tree, i from which the pulp is mace, provides | about half a cord of wood, which reâ€" | prosente five hundred pounds of paâ€" i per, so that the nine works of ficâ€" | tion were responsible for using up no | fower than four thousand â€"trees.â€" Chambers‘ Journal. Willie the Wise Child. Philadelphia sdger, Papa â€" Soe here, Willie mustn‘t bother me. When I little boy I didn‘t bother my with questions. i The only defence against contagâ€" | lon is exuberant health It is the man who is run down who becomes the victim of the pestilence. It is not otherwise in the reaim of the | Spirit. If we are to be protected : against the pestilence that walketh | in darkness we shall have to be . possessed by a plentitude of #pirâ€" { itual life.â€"J. H. Jowett. Ab, sighing little mother, why &it looking pensive there 2 There still is sunlight in the sky And sweetness in the air. The peaceful moments calmly goâ€" Come, come, don‘t be a foolâ€" I‘m sorry for the teacher, though, Since Willios gone to school. Our neighbors‘ chickens calmly hunt For bugs and worms and things, Or sun themselvyes, relieved from fear Ot broken legs or wings, The dozing cat is cuddled up > All in a peaceful heap, And out upon the steps the pup Is catching up on sleep. Williec‘s (Gone ty School. Chicago Recordâ€"Herald. Dear little Willie‘s gone to schoolâ€" We left him at the doorâ€" The baby that his mother had, Alas, is here no more. His little kilts are put away, 1 His flaxen curis are shorn ; His toys lie in the hall toâ€"day, f Neglected and forlorn. 1 ‘ Willieâ€"Maybe if you had ) able to answer mine. No one can resist the argument of holiness brought in a personified form before him, in its gentleness, in its.sweetness, in its asplration, in its love, in all its blossoms and fruits of peace and Joy.â€"Henry Ward Beecher. Words of the Wise. Holiness is not a rapturous triâ€" umpl away up somewhere in vague heights oi glory, steadfast and splendid like a sun. It is just a poor heart that makes room for Jesus.â€"Mark Gup Pearse.. Sunshine. 9 The Open Window. How little it costs, if we give it a thought, To (;nake nbappy some heart each ay ! Just one kind word and a tender smile, As we go on our daily way ; Perchance a look will suffice to clear The cloud from a nelchbor‘s face, And the press of a hand in sympathy A sorrowfui tear ef{ace. One walks in sunlight ; another goes Ali weary in the shade ; One treads a path that is fair and smooth, Another must pray for ald. It costs so little! I wonder why We give it so little thought ; A smileâ€"kind _ wordsâ€"a _ glanceâ€"a toueh ! What magic with them is wrought, vicin Were the ty.â€"London 'l‘elegi;zihh. Books Worth it ? Willie, you . pa, you‘d "On ‘the other hand, it is a rather curious fact that in the case of the moderate drinker, who ailso smokes, the cutting off of his supply of toâ€" bacco will increase his appetite for alcoholic beverages, and _ while at first the liquor will not affect him nearly so much as when he is smokâ€" ing, in the end it will do him up. Consequently, it is safe to assume that the man who alway‘s used liquor and tobacco in moderation, will, if hne gives up tobacco, take more strongly to liquor. In fact, this is no assumption; it has been demonâ€" :strated on numerous occasions."â€" Philadephia Record. . What a Lovely Ending. Chelsea Gazette. Boggâ€"What ailed the editor _ of that comic paper who died the other day ? Bing. I don‘t know. I think one of IThe dOALOGRE ¢ BAX kn Uhi e cal 2t of the doctors said he had tickled to death. ‘"The prevalent idea that drinking and smoking are companion vices ig altogether wromg," said a physician, who has made a special study of M®psomania. "I find, on the contrary, that the habitual drunkard is not abnormally addicted to the use of tobacco .He may use the weed as a lesser stimulant, when not strongly under the influence of alcohol, but when the drink gets firmly intrenchâ€" ed in his system he cares nothing for tobacco, for then it has lost its foree and its influence upon his nerves. Of course I mean in extreme cases, some part in the game that doesn‘t require running. JIf there is a hungry one give bhim part of your dinner. If there is a dull one help him tearn his legson. If there is a bright one be not enviou@ of him, for if one boy is proud of his talents and another is envious of them there â€" are two great wrongs and no more talent than before. If a larger or stronger boy has injured you and is sorry for it, forâ€" give him. All the echool will show by their countenances how much better it is than to have a great fussâ€"Horace Mann. J It there is a boy with ragged clothes don‘t talk about rags in ‘his hearing. * If there ls a.”lame boy assign him It ‘there is a boy in school who has a clubfoot don‘t let him know you ever saw it. A Word to Boys. You are made to be kind, boys, erous, magnanimous, Chas. O. Brown, journalist, of Duluth, Minn, writes : "I have been a sufferer from Throat and Nasal Catarrh for over 20 years durlns which time my head has been ltorged ug and my condition truly miserable. Within 15 minutes after uslnfi Dr. Afi' ew‘s Catarrhal Powder I obtained relie!, Three bottles have almost, if not entirely, cured me." Wondetful Testimony to the Curative Powers of Dr. Agâ€" new‘s Catarrhal Powder. 20 Years of Vile Catarrh "It may be that I shall leave a name sometimes <remembered . with expressions ef goodâ€"will in those places which are the abode of men whose lot is to labor and to earn their daily bread by the sweat of their browâ€"a name remembered with expressions of goodâ€"will, when they shall recreate thair exhausted strength with abundant and unâ€" taxed food, the sweeter because it Is no longer leavened with a sense of injustice."â€"Sir Robert Peel. OJ C s C d % "I think Dodd‘sâ€"Kidney‘ Pills :?de a permanent cure in my .case, ‘bat I wilh never be‘without; them in "‘the ‘house. ‘I had -‘Lg;.'nbugo and .Bladder Trouble for yearts. I ft1ied other mediâ€" cines and a .banddge prescribed by the doctor,. but I,could get no reâ€" lief till I used Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and they cured me." _ _ If your dealer has it you should see it at once. If not, write us and we will be glad to send you a desâ€" criptive booklet. ~ If the disease is of the. Kidneys :or from the Kidneys, Dodd‘s Kidney Pills will cure it. t It is needed in every home and you cannot afford not to have it. Campbellford, Ont., Oct. 12.â€"(Specâ€" lal)â€"That.Urinary TProubles an 4 Lumâ€" Â¥ou do not require to touch the clothes to thoroughly clean them and a tubâ€"ful can be done in five minutes. Kidneys has ‘Heen. proved by. Jgmes Atwell, ,of <this :place. Hebg Lumâ€" bago and. paips in the bladder »t‘nq io. passingibis nrine would hyrt: him #o %a to algivust .chuse: tears‘ to tome to his eyes. â€" c‘ B He:cured‘ his* Kidneys by uging Dodd‘s Kidney. Pilisâ€"â€"and his pains of_all kinds vapighed. :. o 7 Speaking * of ; his. case,: Mr,> Atwell Dall Beafinf Washer does away with all hand rubbing. You do not require to touch the And his Lumb&go and Urinary Trouâ€" bles Vanished once and ‘for allâ€"He Tells His Story. & James Atwell Cured His Kidneys B’Y using Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. The Dowswel! Mfg. Co. Ltd., Hamilton, Ont. STRUCK THE ROOT OF HIS TROUBLE Drinking and Smoking. . Agnew‘s Ointment relieves piles instantly. Bearing Washer does Peel‘s Vision. result .of Aa#.»r&red' an. proved "by, Jygmes ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Whatever reduces the drudgery of housengkls worth having, The New Century , genâ€" Railway Enterprise in Africa. Baltimore Sun. A contract has been made for the early construction of a hugh steel bridge to span tho Zambesi River near the Victoria Falls, and an enâ€" gineer has just left England to begin the work. The railway between Buluâ€" wayo and the falls will be completed by January next, the section beâ€" tween Buluwayo and the Waukie coal mines having been completed during the present month. As many as 167 miles of it had been opened to trafâ€" fic in March last. Access by rail to the coal mines is expected to boost the gold and copper mining indusâ€" tries of Rhodesia. ‘The quality of the coal is said to be very fine. "I think the shin bone ought to have been located at the back part of the leg instead of tho front."â€" Chicago Tribune. ‘" With all due respect, professor," interrupted tho tall, gaunt, spindle. chanked member of the class, " I think Icould mention a possible imâ€" provement." 4 * Indeed !" said the lecturer, visibly cettled at the young man‘s presumpâ€" tion. â€" ‘"Pray, what improvement would you suggest, sir ?" be improved upon, when considered in its relation to its environment, and its adaptability to the purposes for which it was created." Able to Sugzest One "‘The humble body," said the lesâ€" turer in anatomy, "is the most absoâ€" lutely perfect machine in existence, [t is inconceivable that it could ever One Hundred and Thirty Thousand of ‘Them are There. The Canadians living in Chicago come numerically filth in the list _of forty different nationalities that make up the population of the Windy City. In proportion of their numbers they have fewer societies of a distinctly national character than any other people. ‘They deâ€" vote their attention in this regard principally to "Old Boys‘" Unions. These organizations _ periodically visit the places their members are from, notably, Toronto, Hamilton and London. In Chicago, there are French, English, Irish and Scotch Canadians. The French Canadians are in the lead and keep in closer touch with their native province than any others. They pregerve their language as well as their reâ€" ligion. The Roman Catholic Archâ€" bishop of Chicago and the Coadjuâ€" tor Bishop of the Protestant Episâ€" copal Church are both Canadians. According to the last census 1,â€" 183,225 persons of Canadian birth are resident in the United States, and of these 130,000 are settled in Chicago. On the other hand, Chiâ€" cago has sent to Canada in exâ€" change fully oneâ€"hal{l of the num» ber she borrowed from this side of | the line. WE ARE ALL FAMILIAR with thedeep, hoarse a€ .mvegnrd cough.‘*‘ It is the ery of the to:tured lungs for mercy. Give them merey in the form of Allen‘s Lung Balsam. & splendid remedy for pulmonary trouble. Animals as Saiiors. A French scientists has made some Interesting observations as to the love of different wild animals for the sea, The Polar bear, he says, is the only one that takes to the sea, and.is quite jolly when aboard ship. AM others violently resent a trip on water, and vociferously give vent to their feelings until seasickness brings silence. Tho tiger suflfers most of all. The mere sight of a ship makes him uncomfortable, anl when on board he whines pitifully, his eyes water continually, and he rubs his stomach with his terrible paws. Horses are very bad sailors, and often parish on a sea voyage. Oxen are heroic In their attempts not to give way to sickness. Elephants do not like the sea, but they are amenable to medical treatment. » t ( _ Instantly a fuse, with an easily igâ€" nitible fulminate at its end and held in place in a slot opening against the friction â€"wheel, is set alire. The flame, properly confined within the metallic slot, travels \aâ€" stantly over the inflammable strand, which is saturated with a freeâ€" burning ingredient. The clock may be set on a nearâ€"by shelf or on the back of the stove or a furnace proâ€" Jection. As even a small and cheap alarm clock may be utilised and as the tube incased fire strand may be safely controlled, that part of the problem is very simple. Moreover, any kind of kindling substance ordinarily, used may be utilized. The fuse may be employed merely to ignite paper under the regulation kindling wood fire, with coal or cordwood on top. In such cases action is similar to that \ of a match or rather, of several matches lighted simultaneously and burning longer than â€" ordinary matches. I With this.gew.. conntrivance inâ€" stailed in a : house it is necessary, upoo retiring, siimnply.to assemble the fuel in the stove or any tt;‘r:s;’laoek. sonnect an, attachment to be \and n%; the latter at any kequired ~hour. When ihe aJarm syounds aâ€"fulâ€" minoate~i@ ighrted, gm_g‘;.‘ muniâ€" ‘catiog" "with| in inflammable. sub; Alance : lz the.stove, range,: furnace ‘or grate,‘itnmeUlately "starts ; ‘the ‘tire. By the time the ‘li(r;use.t_lplder or 3l'.il,l;t /As '?h,’w‘thp Aifele, burning j ..lfy-tlgii he water . boiling: .. ;~ . : It«ds"iclaimed that these new, deâ€" vices may: be so sget"that they wili slzfl,- fires | whenever ~wanted and thus haveâ€"&*thome thorougt;lg heated before the occupants stir from their beds. From the back ol the clock ‘fl:se'd_‘ln conniection . with the autoâ€" atic fiteâ€"kindler extends a shaft, an which is mounted a. rotary fricâ€" tion disk or/puiley, the‘periphery, of which is milled or: otherwise â€"designâ€" ed to create ffiction when rotated In contact with a . relatively stationâ€" ary member. By the operation of, a pivotal atm, a lug and @pring and other attachments in â€" connection with the. rotary><Gisk: this entire exâ€" ternal mechanism is set ‘in motion when the alarm is released. CANADIANS IN CH!ICAGO, Automatic Device Which is a Blessing to the Early Hiser. An‘automatic‘ fire kindler ,the op eration of which isâ€"regulated by as ordinary alarm clock, will doubtless appeal to every‘ person whose duties include getting up early, to start the fice in the kitChen stove. 9 CLOCK KINDLES THE FIKE,. Toronto News. If the Brantford murderer is caught, convicted and condemned, it will not be hard to find men willing to serve as hongman. It givesy me great pleasure to reâ€" commend it, and you are at liberty to use this in any way to further the use of your valuable medicine. Two Rivers. ROBERT ROSS. I have used three bottles of MINARD‘S LINIMENT and am pletely cured. Dear Sirs,â€"This is to certily that I have been troubled with a lame back for fifteen years. a sale of 1,600,000 copies and the paper which these books were printâ€" ed on was made from pulp for the most part. Now, pulp paper means the destruction of many trees in the great forests of the north, and probâ€" ably 5,000 were sacrificed for these novels. It would have been better to have left 4,999 of the tr:es standing and out the other one into a comâ€" posite modern agony. Our Parlor Brandsâ€" A QUICK, SURE LIGHT by using any ome of Forests in Works of Fiction. Springfield Kepublican. It is stated that nine of the most successful recent novels aggregated Kidney Duty.â€"1t is the particular funcâ€" tion of the kidneys to filter out polsons which pass through them into the blood. When the kidneys are diseasod they cannot do their whole duty, and should have the help and su'enfil;h that South America Kigney Cure will afford in any and all forms of kidney disorder. It relieves in 6 hours.â€"14 *VICTORIA" "LITTLE COMET" "KING EDWARD‘ "WEADLIGHT‘ ALWAYS SEE THAT THE Chicago Journal. "I don‘t suppose he meant anything unkind," said the young woman, "but it was a very startling coincidence." "What do you mean ?" "Just before Harold and I got marâ€" ried his friends persuaded him to join a ‘don‘t worry club.‘" "Clever! Why, she‘s so clever she can make ali her own clothes withâ€" out other women knowing it !" Minard‘s Liniment for sale everyâ€" where. Really a UVieverWoman. Brooklyn Life. "Don‘t you think that woman‘s clever ?" Minard‘s Liniment relleves Neurâ€" algla. _ â€" "I said mental arithmetic, not genâ€" timental," said the young woman with great Gignity. Not That Kind of Arithmetic. London Titâ€"Bits. "I have to help Johnny with his mental arithmetic every evenlng.': said the young woman, "and it‘s a | "Do youâ€"arâ€"know that celsbrated probiein about one plus one equal pne?" asked the young man. _‘ Yonge street, Toronto, Ont. Be sure that Yoor tickets radd_via Grand grunk and Leh gh‘Va.lle{ route of the "Black famond Express." This 16 the direct and best route from all Canadian points. BJ' this route bag#age is nowehecked inbondand from Canadian points.The Lehigh Valley has three atations in New York,/up town nearall firstâ€" class hotels, and down town near ali Euroâ€" Tmg, i NeX SS 2 2 Lc dup C 9T 12* ‘What f:lud of a. ring is it ?" _ , â€") > *&n‘ engagement ring is. used. for eparring," remarked the old bacheâ€" lor, "but whenmit is a {ight to a fin= igh a‘ wedding ring is used, I believe." t~.+ .. . . Ohicege News‘) \~ u2t C. °_ "[ gee tha‘t prizéfighters‘light in , ring," *»; remarked â€" Miss. .'QEddygiri ean steamship docks, raving passengers | (0 a ‘urope a long and expenasive trangfer, Se â€"ure our tickets of Grand Trunk agents.: Robert . Lewis, CauadianPassenger Agent, 33 There â€" are‘ very ing operations in â€" m Soap cannot;be, us From the; FOR SALE by Glad of the Job. In Going to.New York â€"* It makes ‘the home. bright For Consolation. Bachelor‘s Viewpoint. 4BBX * few _ cleansâ€" hich Sunlight ed ‘to advant»| MATCHES you suy sear tae name your Povrerty is not digshonorable in (!.’troeg.l but onll_v when it is the effect eness, intemperance, igalâ€" }Fum prod Baltimore News. In former generations we were told that girls kicked over the traces because they were curbed in too tightly. _ Now not even ‘a ribbon holds them, and they are galloping on at a pace which leaves chaperâ€" ons and mothers breathlessly beâ€" hind, and each girl seems to be becoming a law unto herself, only occasionally hampered by some big fence, which will probably be jumpâ€" ed if the temptation is great enâ€" ough, and if there is â€" reasonable possibility of her being able to crawl back unperceived. Buffalo Times. A sweet girl graduate from a Bosâ€" ton school thus describes the manner in which a goat butted a boy out of a front yard in the neighborâ€" hood : "He hurled the previous end of his anatomy against the boy‘s afterwards with an eagerness and velocity which, backed by the goat‘s avoirdupois, imparted a momentum that was not _ relaxed until the Instigation of the vehement oxasâ€" peration was landed on terra firma, beyond the pale of the goat‘s jurisâ€" diction." ; Lifebuoy Soapâ€"â€"disinfectantâ€"is strongly recommended by the medical profession as e sa{eguard against infectious diseases. ,, Minard‘s Lintment cures Buros, eta Philadelphia Press. In a downtown church, there was introduced a new hbymn last _ Sunâ€" day, and after the dismissal of the gervices, the organ blower found his way to the playetr‘s bench and ask«â€" ed in a meek yoice: "How did _ the music for that new hymn go this evening ?" "Ohb, very well, very well, indeed," replied the organist ; "but why do you ask?" "Well,‘ said the blower, "I‘ll tell you the truth, L was a bit nervous and a bit worried about it, for, you see," he went on explaining, "I never blowed for that bymn before." known. The Untrammeilled Girl of Toâ€"day,. Remove« all hard, soft or calloussd lumps and blemishes from horses ; vlood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifies, sprains, sore uand swolien throat, colwh-, erc. Bave g50 by use of one boutle. wire ranted the most wonderfal blemish care ever _"No; he seemed to get lasier evâ€" ery day. Finally bhe was discharg at ‘the finish." "I suppose Grigglieby was fired with enthusiagm when he took up the duâ€" ties of his new position?‘ . â€""You don‘t say ?" "Yes He wasn‘t fired with enâ€" thusiasm at the start, but he was Those Worrying Piles Iâ€"One appiicaâ€" tion of Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment will give you comfort. Applied every night for three to six nights and a cure is affected in the most Atubborn cases of Biind. Bleeding or Ttching Phes, _ Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment cures Eezemga and alf itening and and burning akin disâ€" enses. 1t acts like magic. 385 cents.â€"13 Teaching Mim a Lesson.s» > . Cleveland Plain Dealer. is "Didn‘t I tell you not ‘to ‘"propos?» to me again ?" % . "You #ald aomehung of : the ; tind, but, of courge, it made no jimpression on me." "Oh, it didn‘t ? Well, I‘ll give you & lasson now that you won‘t forget. You‘ll never propose to me ng:tn." "What are you going to do ?" "I‘m voing to accept you." ENGLISH SPAYIN LINIMENT. DR. A. W, CHASE‘S CATARRH CURE ... 250- He Wasn‘t, So He What the Goat Did. Heals the ulcers, clears the air passages, stops droppings in the throat and flermananl:fy cures Catarrh and a{)fever. Blower free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo. Was Anxious. is sent direct to the discased Rfu by the Improved Blower, eals the ulcers, clears the air Our Suiphur Brands “Tm ‘,, “T"m" AII a(‘0<‘l'~'"' i cognized that all . les were usoloss W ’m;d bontrition. he wae read confersed his of Uriah an sheba. _ H being forgiy fil‘donvd of 1 t God forg ing «o long the eyes 0 tempting U= speak the could open praise arig girest not law of Mc» the Torgive: sins as Da: Num. xv. : would now of Godâ€"â€"T)« approves ar trite heart penitent an will never alwaye be tent geeker Commentary,â€"1 forgiveness.â€"ys. j eteâ€"Or, be grac the s‘rwduliox. in pressing God‘s }o denotes that kin« Is expressed by »n fl)l we love AT ndness‘ denotes disposition to go sion. 3, ‘"Tender ; most tender pity is susceptible."_ KoOnsâ€"Sin is «es K*xxiÂ¥. 7, in thr ws transgression Hebrew words t respectively, 1, . or rebeliion agai wersion o« rigot dguct ; 3, error, . right way, missi weldadn. Gil) cleanseâ€"T)h described 1 ent expres ms a «lebi which needs 1t Wash is [zequer purifications (% suggests the c leprosy. This :« deepâ€"seated an irealment. read in this C from bloodgull{i Ishment 0/ my doubt, had in VWriah. His blood geance | agains sgould deliver hi â€"God‘s rightc0u pardon to ihe Mis punishment 15â€"17. Open 11, 12. God admit sence, and xi. T ; Ixi, of uphold permanent restoned «i tng. FProe gives porlc will ceasily things as . JIV. Das life in G« 14, will I gshow fort newal an ousness { INTERNATIONAL LiBsso OCIOBER 18s, 10( . Day (Â¥s. 9â€"12) gBot long them beh will not a er corrup â€"Mibbar fied heas and mad lished + legiance firm as "The wo known is into bein fore exis Eph. ii d that by which grievously injo â€"â€"Cam. Bib. Go than the king David, as king Mightest be jus relation of all against iman | God, so that G: judge of ali in justified in his wicked." David justice, howev, may be. _ ed his b frame. transgressic them. "The is the Tire: Observe als clurul form roken t)h« here that he nature. See slon j« now m sins, but in David bewai and thus aba ing himecls David admits posite of wh: gipres truth in of thought a takes the ser rightness . a kn()wlmlg‘ O k B. Wit bere is horrc lal of the la mon nerh wi walls. Tiis 1 tro uf* iL 18. 1 (w) caused : used deceit, hbardened hi. family, (7) ; weakened ) ever stands transgressic Against the the lepe Whiter to tauk holiness $ik Thour IL Davi« Plg, C141 )1 David‘s Confession,â€"; ©i clost gho w and D (G 1» W gracious unt me! erifice h Da vid U "Thou U 11 80. C Ti H H

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