West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Aug 1905, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Ezek. v. 10) ; ladies in magnificent robes wandered about searching the refuse heaps for a morsel of food (Lam. iv. 5â€"10) ; the nobles whose fair complexions had been their pride walked through the streets like blackened but irving skeleâ€" tons; bloody fights between the advoâ€" eates of surrenzfer and of continued reâ€" sistence crowded the streets with frosh horrors; the roar of the siege night and air night and day, and a terrible pestiâ€" lence swept through the city. All the calamitics came upon Jorusalem at this time that came upon the city six centuâ€" ries later during tre siego of the Romans by Titus. No compassionâ€""So hideous were the cruelties practised by Oriental victors upon their captives that, were tive fire of the besiegers was aided by a severe famine (Jer. xxxviii. 9), and all the terrible expedients had been tried to which the wretched imhabitants of a besieged town are foreed to resort in such cases. Mothers boiled and ate the flesh of their own infants (Lam. iv. 10; 15. Mocked, ete.â€"Jeremiah was impriâ€" soned,beaten and threatened with death; Urijah was put to death (Jer. xxvi. 20â€" 23). No remedyâ€"The nation bad gone beyond all hope. The body was hopeâ€" lessly corrupt. 1t is possible to sin too long, to sin away the day of gruce. Not because God is unwilling to forgive and sare, but because all spiritual influences fail to touch the hardened soul. O sinâ€" ner, awake, repent, your doom is fast approaching. Those who rejeet God will suffer the pangs of eternal torments. IV. Jerusalsm destroyed (vs. 17â€"21). 17. Thereforeâ€"Bocause of their great wickedness. He brought...the Chaideos â€"â€"The sieoge lasted about one year and six months. _ The fortifications wers sltrong, and the defense was brave and skilful. _ "The thud of the battering rams shook the walls day and night; ern ing of the prophets comprehensive view the times."â€"Peloube NT Judah utterly These sieges were at intervals of six and twelve years. The doom came slowâ€" ly, and in merey, to give time for thought and repentance. 3. Prophets were sent to warn and entreat. Jercâ€" miah had been speaking CGod‘s word to them for forty years in Jerusalem. For nearly ten years Ezekiel, also, from the land of captivity in Babylonia, had been uttering earnest words to the Jews in Palestine. We cannot understand the history of these times without reading these prophets; nor do we see the meanâ€" ing of the prophets without a clear and comprehensive view of the history and 16) 15. the Lord....sent to themâ€""Cod did everything he wisely could to preâ€" vent his people from rushing down to their own destruction. 1. He laid upon them several lessor evils as warnings. These were devastations of the country from which a few years would suffice to recover. Then Jerusaiem was capâ€" tured and part of its treasure removed, but the city was not destroyed, and the temple stood. Kings were made capâ€" tive as a warning to coming kings. 2. Bad falen,. Ail ciasses were corrupted. Restraint was thrown off and the peoâ€" ple openly practised all the heathen abominations, even polluting the house of the Lord. 14. t: aee the had falle have laid broad plans for his rebellion, and in all this he was encouraged by the false prophets of his time (Jer. 28)." â€"Terry. The violation of this oath, thouzh made to a heathen, "filled up the measure of iniquity" of this weak and wicked king. M {ve,. Commentary.â€"I. Zedekiah‘s character and folly (vs. 11â€"13). 11. Zedekiahâ€"He was one of the younger sons of the good Josizah and uncle of Jeboiachin. fie was a weak king with no strength of character to do what he knew to be right. "Anxious to follow the counseis of Jeremiah, but without courage to do so, he became the mere sport of factions, and at last was brong;to into ruinous eoniflict with Babylon against his own better judgment. He was a Charles I. or Louis XVI. when the country needed a Longshanks or a Cromwell."â€"Guthrie. 12. humbled _ not himselfâ€"Although Jeremiah repeatedly entreated Zedekiah to obsy the word of the Lord, yet the king through the pride of his heart and for fear of offending his princes would not listen to the prophet‘s advice. 13. rebelled, ete.â€"This was the height of follly. Had he possessed wisdom and eourage enough to obey the words of Jeremiazh and remain true to bis alieâ€" giance to Rabylon, Jerusalem might not have been destroyed. made him swearâ€"â€" Nebuchadnezzar had bound Zedekiah by a mest solemn orth to keep the peac» by fidelity to the conqueror who had set him on the tnronc. "In Jer. 27 :3 we find messengers from the kings of Edom, Moab, Ammon,. Tyre and Zidon consultâ€" ing with Hezekiah, perhaps concerting a plan to throw off the Babylonian yoke; and in Ezek. 17:15, Zedekiah is repreâ€" senicd as ‘sending his ambassadors into Egypt, that they might give him horses f and much people‘ Thus he seems to] find messe Moab, Am: ing with 1 plan to th ~yanday Scehool. INAiALAXALTLIONAL LttEC® & X sELPTV. J 190A 1 be Captivity CGod‘s Efforts to Save His People 14, 15). transgressed very muchâ€"Here we he vile depths into which Judah fallen. All classes were corrupted. aint was thrown off and the peoâ€" of Judahâ€"2 ChLronâ€" 36: 11â€"21 rejects the L impriâ€" leath; vi. 20â€" â€" gone rd (v Big Yield of Peaches in Niagara District This Year. A St. Catharines report says: Already early peaches are coming in on the local market in large quantities, and toâ€"day the price is down to 25 cents a mediumâ€" sized basket. Dealers say that peaches will be cheaper than apples this year, because there are a great many more of them. From all indications the peach crop in the Niagara Peninsula will be a monster one this year, and peaches will make up for scearcity in apples and other fruits. Owing to apâ€" ple tres being so susceptible to the San Jose scale, grower in the Niagara disâ€" trict are cutting out their apple orâ€" chards and planting peach trees in their Mr. Coleyâ€"Bromfield‘s Emigration Scheme Scored by London Paper. London, Aug. 21.â€"The Financial News is very severe on the emigration scheme propounded by Mr. J. Coleyâ€" Bromfield, on his return from Canada, by which he intends to establish an emiâ€" gration society, the chief feature of which is that members are to pay two shillings and sixpence weekly until their turn comes to be sent to Canada with £100 capital. After describing the scheme as a lottery, The Financial News says: "The central scheme of this busiâ€" ness is not new. It has been work»d for cheap jewelry many times, and even now is spasmodically run on the contiâ€" nent for cash prizes." The New Ontario Land Colonization Association is also scored. we find the words "the carrying away into Babylon" (Matt. i. 11â€"17). There is a redemption from â€" eaptivity. _ " God bringeth back to the captivity of his peoâ€" ple" (Psa. liii. 6) "The ....Lord....shall turn away their eaptivity...." (Zeph ii. 7). The slave of Satan ean never liberâ€" ate himself. "As well ight a stream turn backward, or the dead come to life." But it is possible for those to "recover themselves out of the snare of the devil who are taken captive by him at his will" (II. Tit. ii. 26), if they will take God‘s way. Christ came to proclaim libâ€" erty to the captive and to open prison doors (Luke iv. 18). A. D. Craig says: "For eight months after I united with the church I used tobacco. Hearing a serâ€" mon from Rom. xiv. 23 led me to doubt whether a Christian should use tobacco. Sunday night I took the matter to God in secret prayer. The following Saturday night I was at home, studying my Sunâ€" day school lesson, when the clock struck ten. It flashed into my mind that a whole week had passed and I had not indulged in a single soke. The work was done, and the words of the Psalmist came to me, ‘Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits; who forgiveth all thine iniquities, who healeth all thy desires ...... and satisficth thy mouth with good things‘ (Psa. ciii. 2â€"5). I have never had the desire for tobacco since, and the odor is offensive." The Lord is able to save us from sins of every description.â€"Abbic (C. Morrow. I. Sin. 1. Disobedience. "According to all that Jehoiskim bhad done" (Jer. ceil. 2). Like Jehoiakim (Jer. xxxvi. 29â€"32), he disbelieved the word of the Lord and cdisobeyed His commandments as _ reâ€" vealed to him by Jeremiah (v. 12). 2. Disloyalty. He failed utterly as king. He did not forbid, oppose and overthrow idolatry. 3. Perfidy. He violated his oath Nebuchadnezzar, "who made him swear by God" (v. 13) that he would be loyal! to him. He broke the promise of fealty he had sworn by an embassy sent to Babyâ€" lon, early in his reign (Jer. xxxv. 3) and by a personal visit to Babylon ; with Jeremiah in the fourth year of his reign (Jer. ci. 59). 4 Treachery. He broke a covenant with the people that all those held in (bondage should be liberated (Jer. xxxiv. 8â€"22; xxxvii. 5â€"11. 5 Cowâ€" ardice. He was cowardly and cruel in his. treatment _ of (God‘s messenger (Jer.. xxxvii. 21; xxxviii. 6). "I am afraid of the Jews," Zedekiah said when Jeremian gave him God‘s way of escape and imâ€" plored him to accept it (Jer. xxxviii. 17â€" 23). 6. Pride. ‘Jedekiah....humbled not himself" (vs. 11â€"13. The captivity _ of Zedekiah is a marked illustration of the wise man‘s words, "Pride gooth before destruction and an haughty spirit beâ€" fore a fall" (Prov. xvi. 18. III. Salvation. If obliged to stop here, how uterly hopeless and heartâ€"breaking it would be; but the words "carried him to Babylon® (Jer. lii. 11) hold a ray of hope, for thre times in connection with the record of the incarnation of Jesus "He did that which was sight of the Lord" (v. 12). son we see: 21. Fulfil the wordâ€"See Jer. xxv. 11, 12; xxvyx. 10. Enjoyed her Sabbaths â€" See Lev. xxvi. 34, 35, 43. God had comâ€" manded them to let their land rest evâ€" ery seventh year, and because they had violated this command he now proposed to give their land a long Sabbath, or rest, for seventy years. "It is probabie that during the thousand years between Moses and Babylonish exile as many as seventy sabbatic years had been neglectâ€" ed, and at last, judgment that had seemâ€" ed to slumber long, exacted all."â€"Wheâ€" don‘s Com. 20. Carried he awayâ€"When the Chalâ€" deans finally entered the city the king and his men of war fled, but they were pursued and captured. &edekiah‘s sons were slain before his eyes; his eyes were then put out and hg was carried to Babyâ€" lon in chains. He was "put in prison till the day of his death" (Jer. cii. 7â€"11). To him and his sonsâ€""There were three kings of Babylon after Nebuchadnezzar before Cyrus established Persian rule; Evilâ€"Merodach (2 Kings xxyv. 27), Nerigâ€" lissar and Nabonidus, The last two kings were usurpers."â€"Cam. Bib. were eithor impaled anrd subjected to horrible torments, or esrried away as slaves. The women, children and cattle were led away by the conquerors."â€" Layard. He gave them, etec.â€"God perâ€" mitted the Chaldeans to thus destroy Jerusalem. He might have done to Nebaâ€" chadnezzar‘s army what He did to Sennaâ€" cherib‘s host, but the time had come for punishmentâ€"â€"the cup of iniquity was full. in sculpture and inseription, where the perpetrators glory in their deeds, we should hardly believe it possible for men to treat their fellowâ€"ereatures with such barbarity."â€"Ewing. â€" "When the assailâ€" ants were once masters of the place, an indiscriminate slaughter appears to have succeeded, and the city was generally given over to ths Tiames. The prisoners it not for the most conviaciaz evide CHEAPER THAN APPLES. A STRONG CRITICISM, _ C824 CS | _ Irrigation of the delta and midd4le their apple orâ€" | Egypt is assured by barrages. â€" In upper ch trees in their Egypt the crops are doubtful. as large w JFF ww mm . / db areas must remain unirrigated, _ _ NA evil in the In our lesâ€" Whane! Aneatcore Cotton, the crop of which has been saved by the Assouan reservoir, is exâ€" peeted to be a record. The cotton worm is practically extirpated. The rice ~ro has suffered in many places. The surag crop is late. _ At Assouan the gauge is three metres below the thirty years‘ average. Alexandia, Aug. 21.â€"Egypt‘s official report of the .\“ilfe flood states that the river is very late and low. A "bad Nile" has been declared. Saved by the Reservoir at Assouanâ€" Will Be a Record. The policeman handed her to appear in the Police Co Stanley on Aug. 31 on th breaking quarantire, sworn Port Stanley Health Inspec Indignation reigned when the Port Stanley officials discovered that the birds had flown, and the local police and health departments got to work at onee and scoured the city, but found no trace. This morning, however, P. C. Carr and Health Inspector Mounteer traced them to the house where they were staying. fhivg * Chatham Lady Arrested on Port Stanley Complaint. A Chatham report: Four or five weeks ago Mrs. T. Lakoque left this city for Port Stanley with a little daughter. There she visited friends, and then after some days the child was taken ill. _ Several others of the family beâ€" came â€"similarly affected, and on closer medical inspection it was found to be diphtheria, and the house and inmates were quarantined. _ The Chatham lady did not like confinement to the house and wrote home and told her husband, so at least goes the story, and the latâ€" ter on Monday went to Port Stanley and by some means the wife and child broke quarantine and returned to the Maple City with them. | In about a week, working now and then for about fifteen minutes at a time he had accomplished the task, and, true to his statement, found room enough left on the pinhead to add his name "Young." in one corner. > Last fall Mr. Young and another exâ€" pert in the bureau had a friendly disâ€" pute as to just the amount of delicate work that an engraver could do. Finâ€" ally Mr. Young made the statement that if the Philadelphia expert had enâ€" graved the alphabet on the head of a large pin he could put the twentyâ€"six letters on the head of a small pin, and still have some room left. _A wager was made, and Mr. Young started in to make good his assertion. Mr. Clarence K. Young, for years an employee of the Government money facâ€" tory, is the man who accomplished the seemingly impossible feat of engraving two full alphabets, a date, and a name on the head of a tiny pin only sixtyâ€" five one thousandths of an inch in diameter. Not so very long ago it was believed that the man who first engraved the Lord‘s Prayer on the back of a oneâ€"dolâ€" lar gold piece had about reached the limit in the matter of wonderful feats with the enmgraver‘s tools. Then about a year ago, a Philadelphia banknote exâ€" pert engraved the entire alphabet of twentyâ€"six letters on the head of a large pin. This delicate bit of work won considerable fame for the man who did it, and it was generally considered to be the record in freak engraving unâ€" til the bureau expert entered the field. Now, however, the record of the Philâ€" adelphia engraver has been greatly surâ€" passed. Two Alphabets and some Names on a Pin Head. Washington, Aug. 21.â€"It has remainâ€" ed for one of Uncle Sam‘s experts in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to perform what is probably one of the most remarkable and difficult feats of engraving every accomplished. _ . _ A decree was granted, the pet:tioner being awarded the custody of the two children. On‘ account of this she was medically treated for hysteria, and was ordered frequent changes of scene. "This," reâ€" marked the judge, "showed with what cleverness the respondent had taken advantage of her husband‘s credulity. The "frequent changes of scene enâ€" abled the respondent to be at one and the same time mistress of two homes." Shortly afterward the respondent comâ€" plained to her husband that Bedford was haunting her, that he was conâ€" tinually peering through windows at her, and acting altogether in a most mysterious way. as it was couched in the warmest terms, he questioned his wife about it. She admitted the letter was intended for her, but maintained it was only written in jest, and promised that such a thing should never occur again. In answer to a matrimonial adverâ€" t:sement, she made the acquaintance of the man with whom she went through the form of marriage. During the winter of 1902 the petiâ€" tioner stated that he had found a letter addressed to "Miss Maud Marks," and respondent had lived together most hapâ€" pily. For some caprice she had taught their two children to call her aunt, and she represented herself to Bedford as being merely the guardian of her deâ€" ceased sister‘s children. In summing up, the judge remarked that the details of the story he had heard surpassed anything of the kind he had read in fiction. _ For years after their marriage the pet:tioner and the According to Mr. Crocker‘s testimony, his wife had for two years led a double life, being married to hnself and Harry bediord. ‘The latter was ignorant of her marriage with Crocker. h All Australian Matrimonial Records Are Broken by Her. ® Bydney, N. 8. W., Aug. 21.1â€"Mrs. Herâ€" bert Crocker has proken all records in matrmony in Australia by successfully living a double life for two years. Even in Australia, where the divoree laws are as loose as in Dakota, no judge had ever had before him a woman accused of such an offence. WEDDED GIRL HAD TWO HOMES. EGYPT‘S COTTON CROP. BROKE QUARANTINE. A FEAT IN ENGRAVING. city, but fs ning, however i Inspector M the house whe sworn ou Inspector TORONTO Court the c â€"char out b suinmons at Port harge of t by the Ashworth .. .. .. . . | Atwood ..0..0 .. ..2s , | Amberstburg .. .. .. f [ Arthur .. ;. ;. > . h j Aimonte .. .. .. .. Ancaster. .. .. .. .. . | Aylmer .. .. .. ... "P«lvinston .. .. .. > C1 AlMSLONR , :« : ..; ++ , x+ /4 d | Beamsville .. .. .. . , J Bancroft .. .. .. .+ * | Bracebridge .. .. .. *1â€"Brad{ord .. .. ... . r[Brigten .. .. .. .. n | Reachburg .. .. .. .. Burlington .. .. .. BE Barsie 4. .. .‘ .1"}..". Ceeton .. ;. ;.}+s +s â€"¥‘Blenbeim .. .. ..}.. 1 Brockville .. .. .. .. Burford :.: ... .. .. +. * | Bruce Mines .. .. .. t | Bowmanville .. .. .. J Brussels .. .. .. ..., Chatsworth .. .. .. CoDOuUrg .. .. .1 1. i FLiCHYUERE .. i. .0. .2 ‘% [1 Coo Hill. .. ... Comber.. .. .. .. .. ‘f Chathem‘..‘..... ., â€" EP Colborne. .. ... .. .. i [ Caledonia .. .. .. .. Caledon .;‘ .. . .. 2« «. * | Cookstown .. ;. .. . | Campbellford .. .. .. []Carp .. .. s N L Corawallâ€"i.2)...}) .. .. ECobden ... ... .. %.... | Clarksburg .. .. .. . FI Dundas 1. .. .. ‘«. Punnyille....;.; i. . Dresden ..‘ ..‘., «. . Drumbo .. ... :. ..\ . Durbam=.. ..~;,. ;. ; Dundalk . >«. .: :+ Dolta‘.. ..}.. .. ;. SSEX : 1sz:is« isi+ Emsdale,.. .; .. .. Ehauvale"..~;; ;. :2, Flesherton .. .. .... Forest:.....‘.+.r6 +, FeuWwitk .. ; +.:.«‘ Florence .;â€".. .. .. . Fort Erie .. .. .. .. Fenelon Falls .. .. .. Feversham .. .. .. .. Fergus.:.};,}..}..‘ .. CORFME, .: \ 51. .1k. 2+ a«. Gravenhurst .. .. .. Gore Bay ..;..... :.) . Grand Valley.. .. .. . Grencse.. .. ..‘ ..‘ .. Gordon Lake .. .. .. fMigheste .,; ., .. .. . Harristo® ..‘ ..}.. .. . TiAFTOW; :; ++ ,+‘:a‘lss. Hunteyille .. .. .. .. Farvigh.. .i 2. 323x‘ is Nlomoudt‘.. ... .. ... Iemblg"..‘..... *.‘%.. RIFKBON .siib )2 s+ .. XKifsythe .. .2"%. .. .. Listoweli...1 ..0..‘};; LYUCKBOW .; 2s xscl..+).. Lakeficld .. .. .. ;s« .. Lombardy .. .. .. .. Little Current .. .. . Lansdowne .. .. .. .. Lyndhurst .. ../.. .. Lion‘s Head .. .. .. Langtou:.;. 4 51s.%... VaAamable .. .. .. .. Ireteaite‘} .. ..0..".. MEUNCEY .++ w 205. iwvs /s NETOM 4+ } 6e us s :2 +2 Meafor® ;. .% ..¢.«0 1. Marmorsa .. .... .. .. Manitowaning .. .. . Mabsely .. :. }..8 2. . MHdintte â€"1., 4 : .w x" x1lvvs NMiHlomay ;.>...%.".... McDonald‘s Corner .. . Magnetawan .. .. .. . Makxvilie .. ... .. .. 0.. [Aforriston .. .. .. .. Marshyilie .. .. .. .. Morwlck!.. .. .. .. 4. Nctherby .. .. ... :. }.. Morih Hay .. ‘..‘..‘ .. Newington .. .. .. .. iNfuestadt .. .. .. .. .. Norwved .....‘.... .. Oakvilit :; .:. ;. .+ +. OrlHs : +s«+>a. zs +. .. Owen Sound .... .. . Ocontases .. .. .. .. . Orteryille ;. ‘:.‘.. .. ; Orangeyvifie .. .. «. .. OGESSE : .+ :¢.. tr. «+ us FeterDOrO + :: %. «4s â€"4. Figto®r:.:. s i. X% i.) Faris! .. .. «. is 4 te% Pricevilie .. .. .. .. Fetrolit :./...1.2... Ferth :. :s) 4Â¥ 4+ 44 a% rark Hil® .. .. ..}..". Palmerston .. .. .. .. Port Carling .. .. .. . Pownkesh ..>..‘.,. +. . Port Eigta .. ... ... Richard‘s Landing .. . Kussell .. .. .. :. %,>. Rigetown .. .. .. .. Hiphey .. 1. l1 22 on. l Rockton, World‘s Fair . Fosse8U :. .. .. ++ ar KHichmond .. .. .. .. .. NenfFOW : :+ \s+ 1: s« «40. Koduey «.‘ .... .. ;. Rockwood .. .. .. .. . South River .. .. .. .. Shelburne ... :.>..s. .. . Sault Ste. Marie .. .... South Mountain .. .. . Strathroy «.: ./.«‘ Â¥+, .. SarRIink 1« i6« 12 +. 1. . SmithyiHNe»..} ;. .. .. . Sundbridge .. .. .. .. Sprucedale ..:.;.>.."... Sturgeon Falls .. .... . ! Purity, Strergth, Fragrance | and Delici0OUusN@S$ &enamst "CAlLADA Libby‘s ‘#*" Food Products Veal Loaf, Melrose Pate, Deviled Ham, Dried Beef, Ham Loaf, Vienna Sausage, Baked Beans and Corned Beef Hash., THEY ARE COOKED AND REAbY To SERVE THE FALL FAIRS. i Wiso Housokeopors «. .. Sept. 12, 13 and 14 ++ «* â€"» .. Oct. 2"and 3 «+ .+ .. .. Oct. 6 and 7 + +« .. .. Sept. 28 and 29 «+ss s ir se se‘ "O06 « .. .. Sept. 25, 26 anda * »+ »« .. Sept. 27 and 28 .. Sopt. 1, 8 . .. Sept. 21 . .. Sept. 28 . Sept. 20 Oct. 10, 11 ..Oct. 12 _ Sept. 28 . Sept. 27 ... Oct. § «_ "Oct, $ . Sept. 28 «. Oct. 3 and 4 Sept. 14 and 15 t. 18, 19 and 20 . Oct. 6 and 7 Sept. 23 and 27 . Oct. 3 and 4 Sept. 2 and 26 Sept 20 and 21 Sept. 25, 2. and 27 ... Oct. 10 and 11 .. Oct. 12 and 13 Sept. 12, a» and 14 .... Oct. 3 and 4 & x« ++« ~Bept. .. Sept. 28 and 29 . .. Oct. 5 and 6 .. Oct. 12 and 13 .. Sept. 2 and 26 . Sept. 2 and 27 ai ts taatoa% _ OC%. & .. Oct. 2 and 3 ..Sept. 26 and 27 + ++« . Sopt: 29 . Oct. 13 and 14 . Sept. 28 ana 29 . Oct. 10 and 11 . Sept. 26 and 27 . Oct, 10 and 11 Sept. 19 and 20 . Oct. 10 and 11 «. Oct. 5 and 6 .. Oct. 5 and 0: Sept. 26 and 27 «. Oct. 4 and 5 .. Oct. 3 and 4 + .. .. Sept, 30 + .++ ~«* Sept, ‘ 29 Sept. 26 and 27 Sept. 12 and 20 ++ (1. .. Oct. 8 . Oct. 6 and 7 Sept. 28 and 29 . Oct. 2 and 3 Sept. 21 and 22 Sept. 19 and 20 Sept. 18 and 19 Oct. 10 and 1i Sept. 19 and 20 Sept. 19 and 20 «+ .. Sept. Sept. 28 and ._ Oct. 2 and Sept. 25 and Sept. 20 and 21 ._ Oct. 4 and & Oct. 17 and 18 Oct. Sept Oct Sept. Oct Sept. Oct. Sept. 28 Sept. 19 Sept. 26 bept. 6, 7 .. ‘ Oct. 3 .. Oct. 5 ..‘ Oct 3 Sept. 28 and 9 , .. .. Sept 50 . Oct. 3 and 4 .. Oct. 3 and 4 . Oct. 3 and 4 Sept. 19 and 20 Sept. % and 27 ept. 6, 7 and 8 . Oct. 3 and 4 . Oct. 5 and 6 . Oct. 3 and 4 . Oct. 3 and 4 Sept. 23 and 23 Oct. 17 and 18 . Oct. 2 and 3 Oct. 4, 5 and 6 .. .. SBept 28 Oct. 11 and 12 Oct. 2 Oct. 12 Oct. 14 Oct. 4 and 21 and 12 and 13 and 29 and 28 and 4 and and 3 and 13 and 13 and 4 and 3 and 4 and 9 and 22 and £9 arnd 6 and 20 and 6 Oct. 7 Always Have a Supply of 10 14 London, Aug. 21.â€"The Admiralty have given orders for a flotilla of twelve turbine torpedoâ€"boat destroyers to be built for the royal navy for eoast service. The displacement of the mew vessels will vary from 220 to 230 tons. Five of them will be built by Messrs. Thornycroft & Co. of Chiswick, two by Messrs. Yarrow & Co. of Poplar and five by Messrs. J. 8. White & Co. of Cowes. The destroyers will Bbe named Dragonâ€" fly, Firefly, Grasshopper, Greenfly, Gladâ€" fly, Glowworm, Gnat, Cricket, Mayfly, Moth, Sandfly and Spider. € _ If you are ill, don‘t hesitate to get a bottls of Lydia E. Pinkbam‘sVegetable Compound at orce, and write Mrs. Pinkâ€" hamn, Lynn. Mass., for special advice When a medicine has been suceessinl in restoring to health so mary women, you cannot well say, without trying it, "I do not believe it will help mo." return except your goodâ€"will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surel any woman, rich or poor, is very foolisg if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. g:ined the very knowledge that will selp your case. She asks nothing in r Many women ° }j" * t suffer in silence and driit along from bad to worse, knowing full well that they ought to bhave immediate assistâ€" arce, but a natural modesty impels them to shrink from exposing themâ€" selves to the questions and probably examinations of even their family physician. Itis unnecessary. Without money or price you can consult a woâ€" man whose knowledge from actual exâ€" perience is great. Mrs. Pinkham‘s Standing Invitation, Women suffering {from any {orm of femzle weaknessare invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkbham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, read and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus bas been established the eternal confiGence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which has never been broken. Out of the vast volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than iossib]e that she has gafned the very knowledge that will Watford .. .. Wingham .. . Wellesiey .. . Wallaceburg . Wiarton .. .« Warksworth . Williamstown Winchester .. Weiland .. .. Woodbridge .. Whitby .. .. Ehanty Bay .. â€" Staffordvilie .. Ghedden .. .. â€" Sunderland .. . Thedford .. .â€" Tiverton .. »â€"+ ‘Thessalon .. .â€" Teeswater .. .. ‘Tillsonburg .. â€" TarA .. .> ++ +** Thamesville .. . Underwood .. .. Utterson .. .. + Udor® .. .. ++ + Vankleek Hill .. Wallacetown .. . Wooler .. .. +« Waterdown .. .. Woodville .. .. . Welland .. .. .> sTOP, WOMAN! TURBINE TORPEDO BOATS: stock aS% w‘«fir &i@ :wfw“‘fi .. Oct. 5 and 6 Sept. 13 and 14 .. Sept. 6 and 7 Oct. 11 and 12 .. Oct, 18 and 19 Oct. 2. 3 and 4 JV| Victoria and Vancouverâ€"There is a fair movement in wholesale trade here. rders from the country are fairly large t and 'GillQCfiOII. are incliped to be good. Retail limes are moving well and condiâ€" 'iuo:i.lm’ are satisfactory. Proâ€" | salmon industries continue active. Th« rv D ’ e ..._p_‘*.!' mmy heavy. There A number of English scientists who were found near the fortifications at Eflfwfl'flh were placed under surveil 1 10 very greas activity in real estate in almost all the settled districts of the MT:“ is particularly true at ancouver, although the movement h2# bardly reached the proportion of a boom. hkarvest. Collections are generally satis factory. Winnipegâ€"The trade situation here i: very bright and hopeful. Crop. prospects econtinue very bright. Merchants were carrying large stocks early in the yea! and they hesitated at taking on more until the stocks were needed. The retail demand has been good lately and they Lbave been fairly well cleared out and stocks have neered replenishing. Lendonâ€"While wholesale trade hore eontinues quiet the retail trade in sea somable lines is still good although coun try trade is a little quiet on acount of harvest. Collections are cenarallv catic. Hamiltonâ€"The general harvesting a> tivity in the country is acting against any great briskness in the movement of retail or wholesale stocks but good or ders are coming for all goods and in this eonnection the outlook is very bright. m- about here have been well saved those still to be gathered: ase in fime eondition. Collections are fair to Quebeeâ€"The weather during the past week has been favorable to crops. No imâ€" provement is noticed in wholesale ciroles. City trade is fairly active. Shoe mamuâ€" factures are active. Outside labor is well employed. Torontoâ€"Wholesale trade _ in most lines continues very quiet here. Grocerâ€" ies are wery quiet. There is very little movement in dry goods for immediate shipmet but orders for fall lines are good. The hardware trade is a liltle quiet but the movement is fair and vai ues hold steady to firm. The unusuablly marked firmness in almost all line of country trade is a feature of the year‘s tride: Toledo .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 8444 85% 87% St. Lowily .. .. .. .. .. .. 985% 810 â€"â€" Duluth ... ... ..+ +«». ...« 804 â€"â€" â€"â€" Delrolf .. .. .. .. .. .... SH 0 ~85% â€" Minneapolis .. .. .. .. .. .. 81% $3% 64 Bradstreet‘s on Trade. Montrealâ€"Trade conditions there show littl chang from those of a week ago. Wholesale business is very light and hotiâ€" days still continue. The dry goods trade is quiet, although the movement in fa}l lines is growing. The outlook in this connection is very bright and orders comâ€" ing forward are good. Groceries are quiet but there is a fair movement in handâ€" ware. Harvesiing operations have inter fered with the arrivals of country proâ€" duce here. Wools and cottons are ftirm and leathers are higher for all kinds but sole. The boot and shoe manufacturars seem to be in one of the very few lines in which business has been quiet fer some time. Stocks throughout the counâ€" try are heavy and fall orders are licht sat 6 to T%c. Red currants, 65 to 80c per basket. Black currants, y1 to $1.25. Lawton berries, box, 7 to 9c. Blueberries, basket, $1 to $1.15. Plums, basket, 40 to 60c. Peach. ®s, 35 to 50c. Watermelons, 25 to 30c. Cantaâ€" loupes, crate, $1.25 to $1.75. Lemons, crate, §$5.2%5 to $5.50. Tomatoes, basket,, 20 to 2%¢, Potatoes, bushel, 60 to 70c. Cabbage, bbl., 31, Celery, dozen, 50c. ‘The demand continues good for fruit, and prices ruled steady toâ€"day. Raspberries solj wm it . ‘Two hundred bust iâ€""v-'- mmmmu&mm About 700 bushels of oats from 42 to 44 bushel. _ One nucna“‘m.:..' ..',; hands around per m:ulrdo-nl. mdnta.:.da:: mmmwgll.nfido-lt:wngumuj to per new to $10. s sold at 312. No Straw Dressed hogs are firm, with sales at q9 to $9.75, the latter for light weights, °* Wheat, white, bushel .. ..$ 0 8 to ;9 Do., red, bushel .. .. .. .. 0 85 to _ oy Do., spring, bushel .. .... 0 80 to 9@ Do., goose, bushel .. .. .. 070 to 9@ Outs, bushel .. .. .. +. .. 009 to @4 Barley, bushe! .. .. .. .... 000 to 04 Peas, bushel .. .. .» .. ...« 9 75 to 9@ SCIENTISTS MEET T49 m_“geportsi fl mm mm The Week. | |_ You Don‘t K Toronto Farmers‘ Market, The Cheese Markets, i wh sn . wonmmnd wet on was comparatively a,. REBUFF "Jeanneâ€"Jeanne! Come back!" But before he can reach the curtain he Rears the outer door close, and realizes Shat she has gone beyond recall, . With & smothered oath he flings himself onto & chair, and looks about him with a dazâ€" ed, vacant stare. _ He searcoely knows that ahe but when he lifts his head an« she has gone, bhe starts forw The biack fit is passing rapidly, the wom seems stifling and hot as a fumam.i With a fresh oath, the miserable vactim * Ukrows open the window, and passes to . "Â¥Yes," she says, with a look of an guish, "you thougnt you loved me." "Fome mistakeâ€"1 have been mad Jeanneâ€"my Jearneâ€"forgive me! com back to me!" And hbe moves toward her with out siretched arms. ,** But Jeanne, the old Jéanne, is not t« be whistled back to his finger like a tam bird; rathcr, like an wagle, she is soaring mwbove him, and bevond his reach, With one lithe movement s away, extending one hand to 4 yaeiding to him ways a tion to ate,. in« have said 1â€"10r meaven‘s sike Jeanmie, come back to me! 1 wwiih eves But s borne i seemed Y not, y you, & Becaus do you vou #« that x you thinl she ture. erons the ; seorh eome At h ergy « eprings ging, every finger pointing at th whose love you won by deceit ar cealment! Besides." and his lips into a painful smile, "why shou cast aside all you have plaved for are the Marchioness of Ferndal is your house, your settlement are in my lawyer‘s hands already Westerday I reverenc erous, childliie nat« speak of such matte ing what I Inow, I have made as ampl provision for you, score of lawyers at this is yours, you c have robbed me of take away my goo{ vour home." ®inks i1 ma _ Khe is at t â€"something of the last "God knows," he says, wi bitterness, "if this day‘s w erased, my hand should be 'im it out. I say it calml ly. You cannot reps the injury you have done; _ add a sharper sting to it proved you think before ealmly. â€" You the injury you add a sharper You are no â€" 13 vou Dr like til Its FRESH, NATURAL FRAGR will be a REVELATION to you. Al ri n e3 LOVE AN vourself too ONLY ONE BEST TEA nows that she has moved, ts his head and finds that he starts forward, calling vou s( wor â€" nature matters tr cat t} Jeanne; you ha‘ much a woma: every tongue wa UNTHL Y g at the man eceit and con his lips twis rX h suppre ork coul the firs Try th D at 1t 18 n

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy