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Durham Review (1897), 29 Oct 1903, p. 7

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44, L ))03 assassination of u drifting and in 1 horoscopes will cceas in business )f birth and 10e rertain how you olutely free. Prof. [:de.deml Occult St., New York. SCOPE t‘s bis worst Satanle maj ry comfortâ€" eda the teleâ€" nd it necew heff ENOS can have ady tim. sald _ Dante, in the inâ€" mse to me r establishâ€" eeney, utifies, hroat, cowlu. bottle. arâ€" misa care ever e tm __â€" to be a man out faults of Turquelse nted her," aid, k wed. osom (riend, id played, ‘ancy‘s thes ife‘s mald * hese premiâ€" ly 15 Collar 0 send your 15 Collar s each, and . all charges Bisque Doll, vour FULL al eyes, real tely dressed is is not a h. When you ing Balsam. It roat and lungs «um ptl og. tively these 4:A ind mailing illousad lumps blood sparin, OS, RES M nde. If %, Canada OLL are illus= INIMENT. >0 oger of modern ‘ul Brooch I was here of III. David‘s flight from Jerusalsm. va. 13â€"23. The rebellion proved popuâ€" lar. And Absalom moved swiftly to Jerusalem. As soon as David heard of It, he proposed to flee from Jeruâ€" salem and leave the city and the kingdom to his son. This action scems very strange. "But, politically considered, David‘s action was the wisest that could be taken. For so awlden was the outbreak that the clty was not in a condition to stand a siecge; and the popular excitement bad so seriously affected the citiâ€" zens that David scarcely knew whom to trust."â€"Tuck. PRACTICAL SURVEY. The rebellion of Absalom was made not only possible but probable by certain conditions in the king‘s own bouschold and personal conduct. 10. Sent spies â€" To find out public opinion, and prepare to proclaim Abâ€" salom king when the signal was givâ€" en. Absalom reigneth â€"On the sudâ€" den spreading of this proclamation some would conclude David was dead, others that he had resigned ; and thus they that were in the secret would draw in many to appear for Abealom, w ho, if they had rightly unâ€" derstood the matter, would have abâ€" horred the thought of it.â€"Com. Com. 11, 12. with Absalom went two hundred men â€" These were courtâ€" lers such as usually accompanied kings and kings‘ sons on their journâ€" eys. They were probably of the principal men of Jerusalem, whom he invited to join him in the feast on his sacrifice. They were kept ignorâ€" ant of Absalom‘s wicked plot. Ahithoâ€" phol . .. David‘s counsellor â€"It is supâ€" posed by the Jews that Ahithophel was incensed against David for abusâ€" Ing Bathsheba, his granddaughter. The manner of Absalom‘s sending for him seems to indicate that he was already â€" connected with the plot. The people increased â€" This shows that deep and general dissatisfaction existed at this time against the person and government of David. ) asckesa O 0 " 0 °C ~TTeRe â€" t uoble king, just suited to their presâ€" ent needs, 3â€"6. Good and cightâ€"Thus to win favor ne gave a decision before an investigallion was made. No man deâ€" putedaâ€"Absaiom guards against acâ€" cusing the king himeeif of injustice ; but he excites in the minds of the people distrust of the king‘s whole judicial practise by saying that there was no regular jJudicial g:'oe.. for a just cause. Oh that I1â€"Thus he proâ€" essed extraordinary generosity and interest in public affairs, yet â€" apâ€" pearing to have no selfish desire in the matter. Obeisanceâ€"The customâ€" ary greeting, as bowing to the grounu. n~ «issed himâ€"Embraced im as 2 (rreed o« brother, apparâ€" ontly forgel{ul of his position and bonor. _ Stole the heartsâ€"By his beauty, aud pretended friendship wilh them and anxiety for them, be turnâ€" e@d the people from his father to himâ€" self. * II. Absalom‘s rebellion (ve. 7â€"12), 7â€"9. After forty years â€" father afâ€" teor four years. It is generally â€" adâ€" mitted that forty years is a mistake in the text. The time must be the years alter Absalom‘s return to Jerâ€" usilem and his beginning to practise the base arts of gaining popularity. Pay my vyow.â€"David was glad at this indication of religious feeling on Absalom‘s part. The deceitful son preâ€" tended to have been a strict followâ€" er of Jehovah, even while he was in a heathen country.â€"Spence. Go in peace.â€"These were David‘s last INTERNATIONAL LEKsSsOoN NOVEMBER 1. 1003 D-vflnd.Ah!ll-.â€"nh.l:M& * Commentary.â€"1. Absalom stealing he hearls of the peopie (Â¥8. 1â€"6). 1. Aiter thisâ€"After Absalom‘s return {from Gestur and his restoraiics ""‘" PAJ spent 20 P qy 20005 it such an excess of oxrgen. in staple Liquozone is stmply liquid M.mde:olifi‘z nh:m':j t ie 4 spent 20 years on it. His @DJOOC Â¥0â€"â€" . . UISCCSEC,. A:ng there is“m;. other viv:y to do it. y drug that kills germs a poison to m. -mf it cannot be taken internally . s uozone alone can attack a t:lul;‘h that caused by inside ; a cures diseases which ..am-;« cured. This company, after testing Liquozone for two years in the most difficult germ diseases, paid $100,000 for the American rights. That is by far E‘f hi‘he:t price Kills Inside Germs. Uquomellooekinl!""‘i'mbod’ without killing the tissues, too. _ It is so certain that we publish on every bottle an offer of $1.000 for a disease germ that it cannot kill. Liquozone destroys at once and forever the cause of any germ product may have great Claims mA about it; but men don‘t pay a price like that save for a discovery of remarkable worth to humanity. CA UC, 20â€" BB ..2 Lk S ce iviae. . 20 T ever paid for similar rights on any scienâ€" tife S':covory. Ts We publinhth'shctunhovyuu: value of Liquozone. '{'H-f‘l‘t___m'h Liquid Ozrygen. For Liquozoneâ€"Yet _ .0 CofT T~HVC Wad i in the gate during part t would thus appear that real good ol the people is PM 0 s vasl C 3 We Paid $100,000 , happine meennmeneneneeee t RC LC if (Liquosone was formerly knowsn in Canada as Powley‘s Liquified Ozome.) uo. Frederick Johnston, of ‘Toronto, his been summoned to answer to a charge of carrying on a lottery in that city. These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indirect and unâ€" certain. . Liquozrone kills the fenno, wherever they are, and the resulits are inevitable. B{n destroying the cause of the trouble, it invariably ends the disease, The Canada Furniture Company‘s eawmill at Wiarton was burned, with a lot of oak lumber vesterday. The loss is placed at $50,000. _ __ form into the blood that no germ could live in any metmbrane or tissue. Liquozone does that. Oxrygen is Nature‘s greatest tonicâ€"the very source of v'i:l'lity. l:!eflecu u; exl.:ih.l::i.:(.â€" ying, vitalizing. othing in t:’::vorls‘innpod‘foryon. But germs are vegetables ; and this excess of oxygen â€"the very life of an aninalâ€"iodend{y to vegtlble matter. e spend 14 days in making each ioi oxyred n predort pinich mill core iquid oxy uct w will cure diseases wmrmedied skill can cure without it. It is now employed in every great hospital, and indorsed by every L2 O C th es wzaeld awaro Much may be learned from the lesson before us. Beauty of person is a calamity to its possessor unâ€" less coupled with graces of charâ€" acter and mind. Pride and selfâ€"seek= ing bring their whole reward of igâ€" nominy (Esth. vii. 10). It is better to accept defeat at the hands of God than to plan our own successes. Our devotion to Christ should be as sincere and unalterable as that of Ittai‘s band to King David (Acts xx. 24). Wesley F. Matthewson. medical authority, the world over, David‘s character shines forth in this time of dire calamity. He bows to the will of God in it all. When the loyal priests bring the ark to accompany him, he commands that it be taken back to its place, unwilling that any harm should befall it. If, said he, I whall find favor in _ the eyes ol the Lord, He will bring me again. If not, let Him do as seemâ€" eth good to him. Even the bitter cursing of Shimei is borne as perâ€" mitted by God. _ 4 The news that all Israe! had gone after Absalom fell with crushing efâ€" fect upon David, entirely taking away his spirit for the time. He was not long, however, in deciding upon a course of action. Jerusalem, his loved city, must not be subjected to a slege, so he immediately arranged to flee. His servants and household signifying their readiness to obey his commands, he set forth over the brook Kidron for the fords of the Jordan and the eastern tribes. over hi@ owsn banishment from court was fresh in his mind. When all was complete the cry taken up from mouth to mouth by the. chosen and scattered spies gave the appearance of a general and satisfactory ncâ€" ceptance of the new king. The piot of the rebellion was well laid.. A time was chosen when many might be fgeling that David was soreâ€" ly to be blamed for the plague which had vigited them in consequence of the enro!ment of the people. _ The choice of Hebron would do much to gain Judah as a tribe. The religious ceremonies ostensibly assumed served used W CubtaW Lo L2 OF day .7 f5C24.;!n;the fact that Jonaâ€" dab could be the instigator of Amâ€" Don‘s crime f(olmp. xili. 5) “di the aAccessory o Absalom‘s deed in reâ€" V;?o forâ€"that crime (chap. xili. 327 A BHIM _wakail 9t UE _ _ _ 16@S09° ImHID iIFOM "his own house, and in the eyes of all the porh should he be diegraced (chap. xif, 12). Unrestrained love for his children was a characteristic of the king; a love which led him to be foolishly iInduigent of their deâ€" sires and pride. Knowledge of their misdemeanors caused him to be very wroth, but records of reBroof or punishment are wanting. From t'nm am Othaw faael ta k 0(201 (ap . ,,| _;_ °C _ young men of the land (chap. xiv. 25). On the other hand, his mental and moral makeup is weak and despicable. He exhibits almost no estimable traits of charâ€" mecter. . The son of an â€" eminently pious father, his on! recorded act of religious zeal is hr: faise and hyâ€" pocritical request to be allowed to go to Hebrono that he may pay a vow made while he abode at Geshur (v. 7). It were enough that a fraâ€" tricide should be granted life, unâ€" molested in his own home, but here is# the total lack of humble thankâ€" fuilress which cannot be satisfied unâ€" tii granted the privilege of full honâ€" ors at the court. #mac 20020 C CACE. FPOm these and other facts it is litle wonâ€" der that tronble beset the path o! so good a man and king as David. Absalom‘s character â€" is clearly portrayed in the scriptural narraâ€" tive. _ In personal beauty he stood without a peer among the king‘s BONR and tha «wa.2 . _ wi. portrayed in the se tive. _ In personal b without a peer amo sons and the young t (chap. xiv. 25). On i his mental and mor: weak and dwclb]e almost no estimable rcter. . The son of pious father, his on} of religious zeal is hi pocritical request to go to Hebroo that vow made whila ha a duced dissara . ~â€""_"* hbad~~intro pee discord :over the ‘heir â€"apparâ€" ol the: whtte enered the montiope * * ° cour f this is seen in the r,0, "P 200 O in Give You Diseases. Feverâ€"Influense a 50c. Bottle Free. -mh«kdmw-.u. e If you need Liquozone, and have never tried it, please send us this coupon. We will then mail ‘yon an order on your local druggist for a fullâ€"size bottle, and we will pay your dmggut ourselves for it. This is our free gift, made to convince you ; to show d‘ou what Liquozone is, and what it can In justice to yourself, please ace:gt it toâ€"day, for it places you under no obligation whatever. Iiquozone costs 50c. and $1. T subirninntobiinlnninbnnnnmnennninanaa Dandrufflâ€"Dropsy I have never tried Liquozone or Powley‘s Liquifed Ozone, but if you will su; me a 196. borile free Twitltake it."" _ "__"_ for this offer may not appear again. Fill ont the blanks and mail it ,g‘thes.iquid Os::e And Dodd‘s Almanac has become one of Canada‘s national advertisements. Published i. many countries and lanâ€" guages it has made Canada a familâ€" lar word in those lands where the great Dominion has heretofore stood for a dreary waste of forest and snow. And wherever it has gone it has been followed by Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and Dodd‘s Dyspepsia Tabâ€" lets. No one in Canada needs to be told of their work. It is familiar to every household. Suffice it to say It hiase done honor to the Dodds Medi< cl(;\e Co. and the proud name of Canâ€" ada. 1 Girle fetch from $10 to $100 and upward in south China. They are soid at any age from 3 to 15, and most commonly at 7 or 8. The prettiest girls are the most desirâ€" able, as in case of marriage or sale they will bring more to the {amily which buys them. Most of the slave girls are bought to work about the house. It is cheaper to buy a servant than to hire one, Iur if you take a girl of 8 you can have her services until she is 15, getting eight years of work for nothing but hber board and clothes, and then sell her for perhaps ten limes your original price. Theoretically there arse no siaves in Hong Kong, as it is British terâ€" ritory, but in reality the city is full of them. ‘They are the maid Co., 221â€"229 Kinsie St., Chicago. My di8€8B048 .......ccesesssecssecssscccenee.. e ana 00 oo oo be ce 08 e 00 on a 80 00 6 6e a0 00 se en on cooe as o i SLAVES CHEAP 3 â€"â€"â€"IN CHINA & fimwmummmmuqfi in south China, where nearly every one owns slaves. There is scarcely a Chinese family of means in Nanâ€" kin, Canton, Macao or Amoy but who possesses one or more slave girls, Slave boys are less comâ€" mon, but the girls are found in every street and in almost every house. ; There are at a low estimate 10,â€" 000,000 human beings who are in servitude in the Celestial kingdom. China has 80,000,000 families, and this makes one slave to every eight [amilies. _ The average is greater In nervous debility Liquozsone acts as a vitalâ€" er, accomplishing what no drugs can do. It shows the growth of an indusaâ€" try founded on merit and cultivated D; enterprise. It shows the appreâ€" rlation of the public for a remedy that they bhave tried themselves and not found wanting. It shows tho health hundreds of sufférers have {ound in Dodd‘s Kidney Pills when in their misery they thought death was their only relief. In addition to this Dodd‘s Almanac contains much that is of interest to the Canadian reader. It gives in conâ€" densed form the record for the year of the wellâ€"known Dodd‘s Remedies that, first prepared in Canada, have come to be a household word in the homes of the civilized world. One of the surest signs of approach» ing winter has come to hand in the whape of "Dodd‘s Almanac," publishâ€" ed by the Dodd‘s Medicine Co., of Toâ€" ronio. For thirteen years this useâ€" ful little book has made an annual appearance, and there are few more {amiliar or welcome visitore to the homes of Canrada. Its data and staâ€" tistice are carefully prepared by the best krown authoritiee and bave been found uniformly correct. How She Knew it. Heâ€"And so you think that if woâ€" men had the ballot they would have minds of their own and be able to give logical reasons for their beâ€" liefs ? She (decigively)â€"I know they would. Heâ€"But how do you know it 2 Sheâ€"Why, because. MERIT BACKLED BY ENTERPRISE CUT OUT THIS COUPON CEYLON tea. Black, Mixed or Natural Green Sold only in sealed lead packets. 250, 300. 40c, 50e, 60c perlb. By all ; 50c. Bottle Free. convecdans, ce on ae caes nes ce n es anae en e o n scscessrses ne se ae cane s c s se 0 on o ane o Stomach Tronbles Throat Troubles Olive oil must be kept in the driest and darkest place in the storeroom, as light irinres it very much. For â€"Burnsâ€"Equal quantities of sweet oi1, cream and white of an egg beaten to a stiff froth. Mix them and spread on a thick cioth. Bind on the burn and do not remove unti!l place is healed. A simple remâ€" edy consists in scraping the inside of an Trish potato and applying it while moist ; renewing it as it dries. Cough Mixtureâ€"One ounce each of licorice, gum grabic, paregoric and ant‘moniai wine. Put the licorice and gum arabic into a pint of water ani let it boil to hall a pint. When coig add the paregoric and antimonial wire. Dose one teaspoonful three or four times a day. Shake before using: We should rot feel put out or hurt, for girls gave warning plain; they wore our necktie and our ghirt, our sweater and our cane. Take warnâ€" ing from the circumstances, O man, and hide away your pants."â€"Chicago News. vup We have to keep the crossings clean and free from imud and dross, or the police must hold a screen when girls essay to cross, and when they mount the trolley cars man should be lookâ€" ing at the stars. Now, when the, naughty breezes blow, oh, what will poor man do? His blushes like a ilame wiil glow, U what we bear is true. No gentle~â€" man will turn his eye to rubber when the girle pass by. a The screenâ€"door stocking that they wore was quite the limit‘s edge. Inâ€" stead of going worse and more we thought that they would edge ; we {felt in looking at that fad they needâ€" ed darning pretty bad. â€" ‘Their latest fad will be a hit, if it i# really so ; we‘ll have to take their word for it, for how else should we know ? The very statement mildly shocks that girlse have donned their brothers‘ socks. LADIES AND CHILDREN Often suffer from exceeding nervousness. The application of one of the "D & L‘" Menthol Plasters to the base of the spine is always accompanied by the most gratifying reaulta. For the relleving of pain they have no equal. Death or lunaoy seemed the only aiterâ€" native for a wellâ€"known and highly respected lady of Wingham, Ont., who had travelled over two continents in a vain search for a cure for nervous debility and d{upeglla. "A friend recommended South American Nervine. One bottle helped, six bottles cured, and her own writtn testimony closes with there words:> "It has saved my life."â€"20 . Mr. Ben Greet has placed the Canâ€" adian public under obligation to him for affording them an oppurtunity to see a famous "morality play" perâ€" formed on the stage with appropriate setting and good acting. h I ~~ ~ONTARIO Ar Think of buying a baby for a shillâ€" Ing! This is the price which one of the infant ?oylums of Shanghai is said to pay for thom. This is a philanthropic institution, and the children are: bought as a matter of charity and religion. They are reared surrounded by Christian inâ€" fiuences, are taught all sorts of doâ€" mestic duties, and when they arâ€" rive at the proper age are given reâ€" epectable husbands. f There are slave brokers in all the large Chinege cities. â€" Their business increases at times of famine, and the starvation which lately prevailed in North China, caused many parents to soll their children. _ With some It was a question of allowing them to starve or selling them. The reâ€" sult is that girl babies are a drug in the market. The man who is addicted to the opium habit will sell his children, and not infrequently his wife, to supâ€" plyâ€" his appetiote. _ Wives are somictimes sold by gambling husâ€" bands, being put on the turn of a card or the rakeout of the cash at fanâ€"fan. They search the country about for promiging young girle and put them through a regular course of trainâ€" ing. They have farms where the slaves are taught to sing, play upon ensica) instruments and to acquire other accomplishments which, added to beauty, will cause them to sell for high prices to the rich nuundarâ€" In9. ~These girle ares chielly the daughters of poor people or the daughters of slaves. > It is common for a man to purâ€" chase his wi‘e. Indeed, there are more wives acquired in this way than in any other. Every man in ‘China hbas a right to as many wives as he cans maintain and a secoudary wife is cheaper that a hired serâ€" vant. The first wife is the legal one, but the others have theirâ€"rights although they are practically slaves, There are localities in â€" China where the girls are noted for their beauty. The cities of Yangâ€"Chau and Suâ€"Chau are as famous for rearing handsome young girls as Georgia in the Caucasus, from where rich Turks so often obtain their ‘wives. There are persons in these. cities who make a business of raising slave girls. & Female slaves are often presents from one man to another, and not Infrequently they form a part of a bridal outfit. They are. comâ€" monly bought as secondary wives and often as teachers. servants and nurses of the Chinâ€" ese. Every semailâ€"footed lady needs slaves to help her about, and in the houses of the rich, where there are many daughters, it is not unâ€" common to find from twenty to thirty siaves in a single {family. Was the Editor There? Toronto Globe. , bue, 60c per 1b. By all grocers Household H ints. Brother‘s Socks. TORONTO port, says the rx{)ort trade this year is over half a million barrels. Nova Bcotia Ribstones fetched toâ€"day 20 shil‘ings against the usual 18 shilâ€" Canadian Apples In London London, Oct. 23.â€"The Nova Scotia Government‘s display of winter apâ€" ples in the Crystal Palace is creatâ€" ing much interest among British iruiterers and the public. . ‘The ex.â€" hibit is tastefully arranged, and the big court is filled with apple scent. Bome Blenheims measure a foot in circum{ference. Hon. Mr. Drysdale, who himself has 200 barrels for exâ€" There has been a satisfactory movement in wholesale trade at Oitawnma the past week, all things considered. Retailers are buying fairly well now to sort stocks for the late fall and winter trade. grices of all staple goods are very rm. London wholesale trade is satisâ€" factory. Considerable _ shipments are being made. Thie conditions of country trade are fair, but the fine weather is restricting sales of searonable goods. The outlook> for business is bright. Trade at Hamilton, as reported to Bradstreet‘s, has â€" been _ fairly active this week. The sorting deâ€" mand is very fair, considering the weather conditions. Values of doâ€" mestic _ staples _ are firmly Weld, and in many lines of imported goods it is a wellâ€"known fact that repeat _ orders _ will cost tnore money. * , j Thiere is a large amount of grain moving now _ in Manitoba. The money _ circulation is expanding, payments are improving, and genâ€" eral business is in a â€"sound and promiging condition. The outlook is bright. There has been a fair movement in general trade at Victoria and Vancouver the past week. The deâ€" mand .. for _ seasonable â€" goods is showing some expansion. ‘The feâ€" mand for inland provincial towns has been fairly active. The lumber and other industries are quite actâ€" ive. At Quebec little chiange 4s noticâ€" able in trade conditions from that of the ‘preceding week. ‘There have been more buyers in the inarket in Toronto this week and they have been taking good parcele to sort stocks which are geiting well broken into at counâ€" try points now. The spring orders on staple have been very fair so far,. and the general outlook for trade is promising. There has been some â€" demand here for Canada fleece wool for export to the Unitâ€" ed States, but prices are apparentâ€" ly above the view. of buyers. Northâ€" west ‘orders to go by vessels beâ€" fore ‘the close of navigation are larger. to 802 ; oats, bush., 34 to 35¢; barâ€" ley, bush., 46 to 50¢ ; rye, bush., 55 to 56¢c; hay, timothy, por ton, $10 to $12; hay, clover, $8 to 89 ; .straw, per ton, $11 to $11.50 ; seeds, Alsike, bush., $4.75 to $6 ; do., red clover, $5.50 to $6; do., timothy, 81 to $1.50; apples, per bush., 75¢ to $1.25 : dressed hogs, $7.25 to $7.75; eggs, per dozen, 26 to 30c ; butter, dairly 19e to 23%¢; do., creamery, 22 to 25¢: chickens, par Ib., 10¢ to 11¢:; ducks, por lb., 10 to 11c ; geese, per Ib,, Be to 9¢; turkoeys, per lb., 14 to 16¢ ; potato=s, per bag, 65 to 70¢; cabbage, per: dozon, 40 to 50¢; cauliâ€" flower, per dozen, 75~ to $1; celery, per dozen, 85 to 402 ; beef, foreâ€" quarters, $4.50 to $5; beef, hindâ€" quarters, $7.50 to $8.50 ; beef, choice, carcass, $6 to $6.25; beef, medium, ‘carcass, $6.50 to $7; lamb, yearling, $5.50 to $6.50; mutton, per cwt., $4.50 to "$5.50; veal, per ewt., $7 to $9. ‘ New: YOrk ...... ........ ... â€"â€" 87 3â€"4 CRIcaAgo ....0 c..l.0 .22 cce B1 3â€"8 Toledo ... ........... ... 86 5â€"8 86 5â€"8 Duliti, NO. 1 ... ... â€"â€" 77 7â€"8 Bradstreet‘s on Trade. ‘The feeling in â€" wholesale trade circles at ‘Montréal is decidedly hopeful. Values of cotton goods and in fact of all manufactures, with . few _ exceptions, are firmly held. Payments have been fair. Following are the closing quotaâ€" tions at important wheat centres toâ€"day : London, Ont., Oct. 24. â€" Toâ€"day 10%e awas â€"the ruling price here; 200 sold at 11 1â€"16¢; trade quier. Toronto Fruit Markets. Messrs. Woodall & Co. cabled Eben James, from Liverpool : 22,000 bbis. sold ; market active; prices very firm. 'm.-o.cto i-‘q--:en} lurmm | Moses saw near Mount Horeb. ‘The street receipts of grain toâ€"day ‘The plant has the remarkable preâ€" were small, with changes in prices, perty of exhaling in{lammable gas unimportant. . Wheat steady, with , [rom its flowerse wh%m- sales of 100 bushels of white at 82¢, l proached by a light, Tire and 100 bushels of red winter at #2¢, | burbns brightly for a fow moments, and 200 bushels of goose at 73 to . the plant in the meantime remainiag T&ac. â€" Barleyâ€"‘ i# ~unchanged, with , uninjured, owing to its sap. sales of 400. bushels at 46 to 50c. | . While this singular plant ssems to Oats firmer; 600 bushels selling at | confirm the truth of Moses‘ m 84 to 35¢. Buckwheat sold at 50c throws no light on the my: # a bushel for one load. | ;’Obl:. hoa.:d by Moses ‘lt)o that time. Dairy produce in good supply, witk Perbaps, however, psychology and prices olP butter and eggse T ere firm. the "bhigher criticism" will account Fresh eggs sold at 30: a dozen. for the voice as being Moses‘ own Hay is sleady, on receipts of 2@ leeling of surprise and awe at the Dairy produce in good supply, witk Perbaps, however, pseychology and prices oP butter and eggse T EPe firm. the "higher criticism" will account Fresh eggs sold at ~$Q> a dozen. for the voice as being Moses‘ own Hay is sleady, on receipts of 3q leeling of surprise and awe at the loads. which solg at $10 to $12 a remarkable phenomenon whish led ton for timothy, and $8 to $9 for ‘ him reverently to take off his shoes clover. Straw sold at $11 to $g11.50 in the presence of the wonder and to a ton. | . ascribe to God what seemed to him Dr.wmzoil hHOFs are unchunwed with 4R niracle. Cowansville, Que., Oct. 24.â€"Hush Allan bought 41 boxes of cneese ar 10 9â€"16¢, 1,161 boxes unsold ; Jas. Dalrymple bought 0 boxes butter at ~Oy%e; Hugh Allan 6830 boxes at 2»1c, Hodgson 29 boxes at 20Â¥%c. Thousand boxes unsold. Wheat, white, bush 82¢ ; do., goose, 78¢ to 74¢ ; do., red, bush., 82¢ ; do., spring, 82¢ to 82%c; peas, bush., 76 The Cheese Markets. Bolleville, Oct. 24.â€"Toâ€"day 2,105 boxes of â€" cheese _ were _ registered, 2005 whauie, balance colored. Watkin got 180, Sprague 75, at 10%e; 10% to 10%e was bid for balance: ] Dreassed hogs are unchanged, with sales at $7.25 to0 $7.75. Leading Wheat Markets,. Cash. Dee. 87 3â€"4 B1 3â€"8 86 Iâ€"s 77 7â€"8 fihb ~ se "..“ .-‘ “' #» m "Ifâ€"â€"_ A plant has Jntely been ptaced, The King a Busy Man. The King takes a very keen interesty in every defartment of public bu«iâ€" ress, and insists on knowing everyâ€" thing that is going on, and likes to be himself consulted about every matter, and particularly as to pointments of all sjescriptions. x only Sovereligns since the Tudor perâ€" lod who have been so personally an4 usefuily busy as H‘s Majesty in Govâ€" er:ment bonds were George IIL and Wiiliam IL . . & I am always afraid that clumsy kindness will step on my feet. The coward enviee the rabbit‘s legse. A Frenchman seems polite enough to shake hands with a crab. l00k at . yourself. Do not bait with . sturgeon to catch perch. The hornet‘s sting feels longer than the heron‘s hooks. You do not have to â€" eat 9ecuule they taste sasweet _ A secret calls at a hundred wige wams. Every man knows how to make love for himself. Stingyâ€"Man tries to â€" warm hime sell with smoke. A hungry stomach does not quarâ€" rel with the cook. Littleâ€"Caution _ sets bigz â€" deatH trap. You can‘t tell a gun‘s kill by its kick. Badâ€"News flies on the lightning‘s wings. In the dark is a good plac» to , 23. ‘HEC NPR IR Sheâ€"I take that as a personal jar when you know that pa‘s in the pig business. Wisdom of Chief Joseph. ‘The press agent of the Indiasp Congress at Madison Square Garâ€" den vyouches for the following philâ€" osophical remarks by Chief Joseph, “afln translated by Red ‘Thunder." Small mothers have ‘br;nihf ‘f;)'rth big chiefs. Badâ€"Deeds loses much sleep, PDT HIS FOOT IN IT. Count Doolittleâ€"Be mine and will live on the fat of the land *"‘The human body consists of the bead, thorax, abdom>» and legs. Th bead contains the brains, in case there are any. The thorax contains the heart and lungs, also the liver anC lights. . The abdomen contains the bowels, of which there are five â€"a, e, i, 0 and u, and rometimes w ord y. The legs extend from the abdomen te the [luor, and have binâ€" ger at the top and middle, to enable a fellow to sit when standing, or to stand when sitling."> The study of anatomy, vecently in« troduced in the public »chools, may be a 2000 th ng in s«m â€" n tin es, but it was evidently thrown away on a certain boy whose essay on the huâ€" ma; body was read at an examinaâ€" tion not long ago, says the Philadeâ€" phia Inquirer ‘This is what he has discovered after a carelfui perusal of the textbooks ; zo Naquameiie {| ~fliaâ€" THE WAY IT GOBS. Heâ€"I rold that article for ten dollars that I wrote on the evile of betting. Sheâ€"What will you do with the morey ? Heâ€"I bet it on our ball team. Whatever be the explanation of the volce, the plant is an actuality, and should be Jne of the interesting {eatures ol the 8t. Louis Exposition. by â€"stientists to be the identical eu . of "burning bush" which The Human BHody. | 4 1

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