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Durham Review (1897), 15 Mar 1906, p. 2

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# 6 # $ &Â¥ by tne peopme in TT they drink aicohol bitter almonds, b laurel, cocculus in sum, henbane, isin wood, nux vomica »l, Look notâ€"lhis prohibits even moGâ€" ; erate drinking. It is our duty to avoid n temptation. See Prov. iv. 14, 15. The perâ€" T(‘ son who enters into temptation is alâ€" | * most certain to fall. Redâ€"The bright | 5© eolor of the wine gives it an attractive | look. Illis color in the cupâ€"Literally, its eye, the clear brightness, or the beadâ€" | 1i} ed bubbles, on which the winr drinker { (1 Jooks with pleasure.â€"Plumptre. Goeth| it down smoothly (R. V.)â€"This verse pitâ€" | p« tures the attractive side of wine, when|p it seems perfectly harmless to sip & lit" | sq tle, when it is bright and inspiring, thrilâ€" | 4 ling the nerves with delight, promising [ ,, all joy and freedom. It is the shining in side of evil that is so dangerousâ€"this Ol flowery entrance to the path that leads te to death.â€"Peloubet. At such a time, beâ€" f ware! 32. At the last it bitethâ€" The| {° pleasure will be atended at last with inâ€" fe tolerable pains, when it works lik» so | f" much poison in thy veins and casts thee | > "drink." _ *"Strong drink first maddens and then unchains the tiger. _ It exâ€" eites tongue and brain. _ What quarâ€" rels, fightings, and even murders, are constantly growing out of the druukâ€" ard‘s contentions. _ Strong drink _ inâ€" flames the passions and at the same time removes the restraint of conseiâ€" ence and will."â€"Meredith, Who hbath babblingâ€"*"This refers to the tendency of strong drink to foolish and incessant talking, revealing secrets, vile conversaâ€" tion and noisy demonstrations, which are common in different stages of drunkeness. _ Nothing goes right with the drinker. _ He complains of God, of society, of his family, of his circumâ€" stances, of everything. Nothing can be right to onme who is thus wrong." Wounds without causeâ€"Wounds receivâ€" ed in wholly unprofitable disputes, suci as come of the brawls of drunken men.â€" Lange. _ Drinkers are especially exposâ€" ed to accidents and diseases which temâ€" perance would have prevented.â€"Pelouâ€" bet. _ Redness of eyesâ€"Bloodshot, blurâ€" red or bleared eyes (Gen. 49: 12).â€" Whedon. _ Alochol induces a paralysis of the nerves controlling the minute bloodâ€"vessels, the capillaries, which reâ€" sults in a dilation that speedily shows itself in the eye. In his step and in his eye the drunkard shows the secret of his sin.â€"Wakefield. _ The â€"traveler in the drunkard‘s broad road to death bears a great bundle of woes. Among them are losses of time, of talent, ofi purity, of a clean conscience, of selfâ€"reâ€" spect, of honor, of religion, of religion, of the soul. The saloon darkens the famâ€" ily, obstructs business, arrests, indusâ€" try, impedes progress, deranges plans, estranges partners, lowers _ personal standing, debauches politics. Such are a few of the woes caused by the saloon. â€" ware pleas tolers much into ing ¢ ing ol a serpent.~â€"Patrick. Iis eifecis are opposite to its pleasures. Its only beauty is when it sparkles in the cup. It can only harm the one who ventures to enjoy its pleasure; then it bites and sends its poison beyond your reach. Its only end and purpose is ruin. Its sting is the sting of death. Adderâ€"In the Genâ€" eva BiWle this word is translated "cockâ€" atrice." It was a very venomous serpent. But the picture cannot be overdrawn. The curse of strong drink is worse than the bite of a thousand serpents. Note some of the evils of intemperance: 1. It injures the body. 2. It disables the mind. son 3. It unfits for the daily duties of life. 4. It brings poverty. 5. 1t tempts others. 6. It leads into bad company. 7. It is opposed to religion and morality. 8. It injures and disgraces family and friends. 9. It leads to crime. 10. It injures the labâ€" oring man. 11. It fills poorâ€"houses and prisons. 12. It ruins the soul. _ III. Strong drink ruinous to charac ter (vs. 32) 33. Eyes shall behold, etec.â€""Thine eyes shall behold strange things." â€" R. V. Some think there is a reference her to tha delirium tremens. But the rendâ€" ering in the Authorized Version, which is retained in the margin of the Revised Version, is according to the Cambridge Bible, "in keeping with the usage of the word in the Book of Proverbs, and with the undoubted connection between excess of wine and lust. The "lust of the eyes" causes the downfall of many. We should basten to close our to that which 'eongltnottoloe.zufl.lhlluthrâ€" When men or women indulge in the use of strong drink they let down the bars to Commentary.â€"4. Strong drink «4eâ€" stroys happiness (vs. 29, 3Â¥9). _ Whoâ€"â€"i divine commission to every man to inâ€" vestigate the perevailing cause of woe and sorrow and stmiic, and thus be deâ€" terred from taking the wrong course in life.â€"Smith. Robinson calls this lesson the drunkard‘s lookingâ€"glass, set before those whose face is toward the druukâ€" ard‘s habits, so that they will see what they will be if they go on. Woeâ€"Direâ€" ful distress; both the condermnation for a sin committed, and a certain awfal condition of suffering. _ Sin of all kinds brings its own punishments, but there is no sin which so speedily and relentâ€" lessly pursues its victim as the sin of drunkenness,â€"Pentecost. The drunkâ€" ard has woes of body and woes of mind ; woes in himself, woes in his family; pains, discases, poverty, and all withâ€" out alleviation. Who hath sorrowâ€"The Hebrew word means, first, poverty, and then misery. _ The drunkard has sorâ€" row of his own making,. "The cup conâ€" tains more than one woeé; a single sorâ€" row is not all. _ These are so numerâ€" ous as to call forth a constant and ‘ongâ€" continued _ ery _ of â€" anguish."â€"Grady. Who hath contentionsâ€"*Nineâ€"tenths of all the brawis and fights, quarrels and misunderstandings are traceable to the "drink." â€" "Strong drink first maddens ew of the toardmar. Sunday School, INTEAKNATIONA: LESBON NO. XII MARCH 25, 1906 Temperance Lesson.â€"Prov. &: 29â€"35 nereased by the spices.â€"Muensche eup of a costly . chemical analysis he people in this drink alcohol, a t almonds, bloo el, cocculus indic . henbane. isingla disenses as h in tl 1 y veirs and casts 1 ird to cure as the â€"â€"Patrick. Its eff a the winr Grinke .â€"Plumptre. Goet V.)â€"This verse pic side of wine, whe irmless to sin a lif last with in rorks like sc nd casts the« re as the bit 8O 4. Destruction.â€""At the last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth like an adder" (v. 32). This is the end. At the first it sparkles and cheers; at the last it poisons and maddens. At first it excites mirth and song; at the last is produces sorrow and curses. At the first it is an affair of good feeling and fellowship; at the last it is an affair of feuds, fightâ€" ing and murder. At the last it is a cup of exhilaration in the hands of thoughtâ€" less youth; at the last it is "a cup of fearful trembling in the hand of an ofâ€" fended God. At the first it is the grateâ€" ful stimulus of an hour; at the last it is the "worm that never dies, and the fire that never shall be quenched." 5. Licentiousness. "Thine eyes uhall] behold strange women" (v. 33). A man} under the influence of intoxicants is, easily tempted. With judgment clouded.:! reason dethroned, memory gone, and ; passion inflamed, he reels ready for an_\" erime. There is a fable that the devil| at one time offered a man the alternative | af « sholee between three sins. one of ; which, as a means of averting some evil or obtaining some good, he was bound toi commit. The sins were murder, incest and drunkenness. The man chose thei last as incomparably at least. This was the devil‘s device, for under the influâ€" ence of liquor he was quickly tempted to commit the other two crimes. Inâ€" temperance is the parent of crime. 1. The results of wine drinking. 1. "Woe" (v. 29). Wine drinking brings the woe of (a) ill health. It poisons the blood and saps the constitution, and spreads the foulest diseases. (b) Povâ€" erty. It indisposes and unfits for indusâ€" try. An army of cighteen hundred workâ€" ingmen marched through the streets ot Chicago carrying a banner inscribed: "Give our children bread." < They went out to a picnic garden and drank forty kegs of beer. If the poor people would put away the beer and the idieness which beer drinking induces, there would be bread enouzh for the children. 2. "Sorrow" (v. 29). Wine drinking turns men into beasts, it makes wives widows, and children fatherless; it robs helpless infancy of food and clothing. There is no sorrow that pen can picture so dark, so heartâ€"breaking, as that which wine drinking brings. II. The remedy for wine drinking. "Look not thou upon the wine when it is red" (v. 31). Do not waste one glance upon it. Do not put yourself in the way of temptation. Turn from it as posiâ€" tively as the little girl, out driving with Miss Willard, who said, "Wicked old saloon, I‘ll try to not even look at the barrels." A Christian who follows his Bible will be a total abstainer. The prieses were forbidden to drink wire. Nadab and Abihu when drunk offered strange fire and it led to their terrible death (Lev. x. 1â€"9). We are priests (I. Peter ii. 5), therefore ought to avoid wine. Paul tells us it is "good" to do this for the sake of others, as well as for ourselves (Rom. xiv. 21â€"23). 35. Have stricken .... not hurt (RV.) â€"With conscience seared and selfâ€"respect gone, the drunkard boasts of the things [which should make him ~blush with )shan}e. Because he did not feel the hurt of his wounds he cares not for the scars. He thinks himself fortunate to be saved from the sense of pain, never fecling any alarm for his unfeeling soul, that has no thought of God‘s great mercy in sparâ€" inng his life in his hel?less moments. Instead of turning to God for merey, he returns to the saloon for more of the poison that has brought him thus far on the way to ruin. Have beaten ......felt it notâ€""Angry companion have done their worst to end my life, says he, but their blows did not affect me." Will seek ...... againâ€"Rather, when I shall awake I will seek it agiin.â€"Cook. Selfâ€" control is all gone. The drunkard is a slave to appetite. He is as insensible to the pleadings and warnings of those who seek his salvation as he is to the beatings of his comrades when he is deâ€" lirious. "One of the greatest punishâ€" ments of drunkenness is this insatiable appetite that, in spite of warnings, and in the face of all conequences, the drunkâ€" ard turns to his cups again. The victim of intemperance will trample over everyâ€" thing to reach strong drink. Put wife and children in the path before them, and they cast them aside. Put respectâ€" ability and honor and manhood there; they gaze at them a moment and fling them away. Bring heaven and Christ and salvation to withstand their downâ€" ward way, and they trample them under their feet, Lay remorse, with all its coiling, serpent tongues and scorpion stings in the path, and yet they wali on. Pile up miseries, sorrows, pains, diseases, before them; yea, point out in the way the ghastly form of death, and they still: zo on for they will have rum." Oh, the; power of an evil habit! It holds a man in an iron grip and drags him down to. hell. And yet this evil habit can be! overcome; Jesus Christ is able to break its power. J __84. In the midst of the seaâ€"To makel one‘s bed on the waves of the sea would ; be to be swallowed up in death. So is | the drunken man. Or as a pilot who has} gone to sleep when his ship was in the troughs of the sea, allowing the tiller to slip out of his hand, and his ship to be swamped with the waves which he might have outriddenâ€"Pentecost. Stuâ€" pefied, besotted men know not where they are or what they are doing, and when they lie down they are as if tossed tby the rolling waves of the sea, or upon the top of a mast. Their heads swim. ‘Their sleep is disquiet, and troublesome dreams make sleep unrefreshing. â€"â€"Com. Com. Top of the mastâ€"The drunkard is utterly regardless of life. He is as one falling asleep clasping the masthead, whence in a few minutes he must cithe® fall down upon the deck and be dashâ€" ed in pieces or fall into the sea and be drowned.â€"Clarke. A drunken man fanâ€" aics himself secure when in the greatest anger â€" . IV. Strong drink leads to folly (vs. 34, 35), every sin that follows in the train. The heart is the centre of life, and from it spring all evil desires, In a state of drunkenness men utter things out of reason and contrary to decency, When a man is under the influence of liquor his character is bad and he behaves badly. Alcohol makes criminals. A large per cent. of the inmates <¢ our penal instiâ€" tutions are there through the effects of rum. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS oif‘uknovsgoodthingwhen y do|she said she paig $2 a week for protecâ€" as|tion while leading the life of a woman of tll;)eo streets. She also gave the :amen of about fifty other policemen, the reâ€" 6 port stated, who were neeh\z.hko hen ‘ amounts from other women in disâ€" trict where she lived. ‘Iohn R. Woodsworth Shoots Himself in a Stable at Crardall, Man. A Winnipeg despatch: A youny man named John R. Woodsworth comicitted -"fiuicidv on Tuesday at Crandall, Man.. i by shooting himself through the temple. [Woodsworth came to Manitoba eighteen fmont.hs ago from Guelph, where his father tresides, and had been doing odd laboring |jobs in Crandall and the neighborhood. Lately he manifested signs of despondâ€" ‘ency, and to this is attributed his act ! of selfâ€"destruction. He shot himself in n livery stable. He was employed at ithe Winnipeg Elevator Company‘s eleâ€" vator at Crandall, and it is said he realâ€" ized about $240 on grain checks issued by himself, and it is supposed fear of exposure impelled him to his rash act. Berthec Claiche Tells How Officers Colâ€" lected Toll. New York, March 12.â€"Berthe Claiche, the young French woman, who yesterâ€" day pleaded guilty to the murder of Emil Gendron, her alleged master, toâ€" day was taken from the Tombs Prison to _ the District Attorney‘s office. She had a talk there with Assistant Disâ€" trict Attorney Ely. Although no offiâ€" cial statement was made public, it was reported that the young woman gave t!le names of four policemen to whom Australia. They are s> toâ€"day. They were moxt fuitroduced to Great Pritain. There again their vast superâ€" lcrity was soon admitted, and for the ailâ€" ments just referred to they are now the best known remedy throughout Britain. From Great Britain, Bileans, because of its superiority, epnead rapidly, and their use is now worldwide. If you were to visit India, China, South Africa, you woull find them in general use. In the wastes of Russia, in the cities of Japan, in the demon groves of Sicily and the grape districts of France, in Gerâ€" many, in Austriaâ€"in all these places you will find ‘that Bileans are widicly used. In trying Bileans for Bitiousness, therafore, do not think that you are exâ€" perimenting with a new @nd untried nemedv. are now obtainable from «wll druggists, and stores, a Sew facts about their disâ€" covery and their exceptional power will be interesting to our readers. One day a fow years ago the Australâ€" lian public were first informed they could obtain m bouseholdé remedy made up in the form of a small beam ‘That :mmmedvmotmwcom- position; that it was enitirely Yiffenent from the ordinary medicines and preparaâ€" tions so widely sold; and that it was a certain cure for biliousness, indigestion, liver complaints, headache, constipation and allied disonders. Ask yourself reither this queastion: if a modicine is backed up by much universal favorâ€"if a medicine can be so wiely tested and emerge from the test vioborâ€" fousâ€"woull it not be useful in your It is woel‘l known that liver medicines hitherto jin use mostily contain bismuth, mercury, and other barmful minersl proâ€" duots, and rely upon thess ingredients for their temporary eifect But these minerail constituarits are v injurioue 4 taken for fomg and mo;fe such efâ€" fects es that of looseming the teeth, causing the bair to {al out, etc. Bileans ere entiroly diffanent and superior. They are purely vegotmble, and contain no trace of any such barmful ingrediews as ttihe above. In taking th@em thera is no fear whatever of arny harmful secondâ€" ary effects. ‘They cure that which they are itaken to «cure, and do not lsave beâ€" hind them evils worse than the original ones. All bsoling druggits now cell Bilâ€" eanps at 50 cents per box, or they may be obtaired direct from the Biean Co., Oolâ€" borme etrest, Toromt>, «upon receipt of price. Six iboxes will be sent for two @ollars, fifty cemits. Bileans shoull not be conparol with othor medicines, They aere different and superior. medicinal plants It was in this derful country that Bileans for Bil mess, the gnaut herbal remedy fo liver and stomach d@isorders wene discovered and used. As Bileans just been introduced finto Canada, are now obtainable from «wl drug and stores, a Sew facts about their roots and herbs that when first discoverâ€" ed by the great Einglish navigator, Capâ€" Australia, that mystertous countryâ€" that land of goldâ€"is exceptionally rich in medicinal plants It was in this wonâ€" derful country that Bileans for Bili>usâ€" mess, the greut herbal remedy for all liver and stomach d@isorders wene first discovered and used. As Bileans have dust been idntroduced #nto Canada, anl Australian CGUELPH MAN‘S SUICIDE. EXPOSES THE POLICE. Natives natives New Yori;, March 12.â€"The Journal of Commerce says: At a meeting of trunk line traffic managers toâ€"day new "lake and rail" rates, to take effect on the opening of navigation, were decided on. Comapred with rates a year ago, they are one bhalf cont per bushel lower on wheat and flax, unchanged on baricy and oats, anmd are one half cent per buskel higher on rice and corn. Followâ€" ing are the rates: 1906â€"Wheat 41â€"2; flax 41â€"2; rye 41â€"2; corn 4; barley 4; oats 3. The new rates refer to export business only, and for the first time in some years higher lake and rail rates will be charged for lo:al than for export grain business. | "A severe action between troops and i'nn.val detachment and constabulary and hostile Moros has taken place at Mount iDajo, near Jolo. The engagement opened during the afternoon of March 6, and ended on the morning ef March 8. The ‘action involved the capture of Mount ‘Dnjo. a lava cone two thousand and one hundred feet high, with a crater at its ‘summit and extremely steep. The last four hurdréed feet were at an angle of 60 degrees, and there were fifty perâ€" ‘pendi(-ulnr ridges surrounded _ with a growth of fibre and strongly fortified !and defended by an invisible foree of | Moros. | Manila, March 12.â€"An important action |between American forces‘ and â€" hostile !Moros has taken place near Jolo. Fifâ€" "‘teen enlisted men were killed, a comâ€" imissioned officer was injured, four enâ€" 'listed men were wounded, and a naval i(:ontingent, operating with the military sustained 32 casualties. The Moros lost [ 600 men killed. | Majorâ€"Gen. Leonard Wood, commander of the division of the rhilippines, reports as follows from Jolo, capital of the Sulu Aslands: It is believed that the result of the in quiry will be the promulgation by th Dominion Government of stringent re gulations for the inspection of barge towed on the cost. _ The loss of lif in this case has created a strong feelin; that the coal company must be compel led to take greater precautions to pro tect the life of the barge crews. NEW SCHEDULE OF RATES PRZâ€" PARED BY TRUNK LINE MEN. The Captain‘s Widow Swears That Barge and Boats Were Leakyâ€"Why the Steward Leftâ€"Measures for Protecâ€" tion of Life Demanded. A Halifax despatch: At the Governâ€" ment inquiry into the loss of the Dominâ€" ion Coal Company‘s barge Rembrandt ofi Isaac‘s Harbor last November, resulting in the drowning of six men, sensationai evidence was given toâ€"day by the widow of Captain Aker, who frequently accom panied her husband. She swore that the barge was leaking, that the on!y boats aboard were leaky, and that the covers of the hatches were left off. \he steward of the barge swore that he lefi the barge because she was unseaworthy. "The army casualties were 15 enlisted men killed, a commissioned officer woundâ€" ted and four enlisted men wounded. The naval casualties numbered 32. Ensign H. D. Cooke, jun., of vhe U. 8. steamer Pampanga, commanding the Pampanga fort, was severely wounded, and Coxâ€" swain Gilmore was severely injured in the elbow.. The constabulary _ casualties _ were Capt. John R. White, wounded in th thigh severely; three enlisted men kille and 13 wounded. Capt. Lyree River sustained a slight flesh wound in th thigh; Lieut. Gordon was slightly wound ed in the right hand; Lienut. Wylie T "The action resulted in the extinction of a band of outlaws, recognizing no chief, which had been raiding friend!y Moros, and who, owing to their defiance of the American authorities, have stirred up a dangerous condition of affairs." INVESTIGATING THE LOSS OF THE REMBRANDT. Col. Jos. W. Duncan, of the 6th Inâ€" fantry, directed the operations. All the defenders of the Moros‘ stronghold were killed. Six hundred bodies were found on the field. Conway, of the 6th Infantry, was slightâ€" ly wounded in the left eye. All the wounded are doing well.. BARGES DFATH ‘RAPS. The Moros Left Six Hundred Dead on the Field. Fifteen Enlisted Men Killed and SThirty Two Wounded. U. S. TROOPS HAVE FIGHT. Fierce Engagement With the Hostile Mcoros on Sulu Island. LAKE aND RAlL. found under the cliff of the Go: ten days ago was not that of Dould'g Meâ€" Fean, of Inverness, Scotland. This Mcâ€" Bean is missing at present, but Johnson saw him in Lockport in Identity of Skeleton Found at Niagara Still Unsolved. A Niagara Falls despatch: John Johnâ€" son, of Kitchener street, this city, came forward today with evidence which shows that the mouldering skeleton _ Londonâ€"All lines of trade there comâ€" tinues fairly satisfactory. While the wholesale trade is quiet. BRADSTREET‘S ON TRADE, Montrealâ€"In most lines of wholesale trade there is a quiet tone noticeable. Sorting orders in dry goods are not very heavy, nore are they expected to be so until after the millinery openings which take place about the second week in March. Indications are that the millinâ€" ery trade of the coming spring will be exceedingly heavy and summer business continues to promise well. _ Deliveries from warehouses are hbeavy and there is already some fair ordering for _ fall lines. The grocery trade is rather more active. Sugars are _ firm and canned goods continue to advance. Activity in outdoor work has kept up the demand for all lines of hardware and metals are active although somewhat easier in price. Collections in all lines are x'eportedp fair to good and the general outlook in all lines of trade continues satisfactory. Victora and Vancouverâ€"Wholesale and retail trade have been showing more acâ€" livity during the past week and the tone of business is generally very hopeâ€" ful. The demand for camp supplies conâ€" tinues brisk, following upon continued activity in the mining and lumbering inâ€" dustries. Collections are reported good. Hamiltonâ€"Spring business continues to move well and placing orders for all light lines of dry gods are fairly heavy. In other wholesale lines there is a good seasonable trade doing. Receipts of counâ€" trvy produce are light. Local industries are active and trade conditions generalâ€" ly are satisfactory. _ Sheep and Lambs.â€"The run of sheep and lambs was light, and Wesley Dun got nearly all in sight. Mr. Dunn quotes them as follows: _ Export ewes at $4.75 to $5.25 per ewt.; export bucks at &4 to $4.50 per ewt.; select lots of lambs at $6.75 to $7 per ewt.; mixed lots at $5.50 to $6.50 per ewt. Hogs.â€"Mr. Harris reports prices as unchanged at $6.85 for gelects, $6.60 for lights and fats; $4 to $5 per ewt. for sows, $2.50 to £3.50 for stags. Milch Cow@aâ€"About 25 milch cowe and springers sold at $30 to $65 each,. Trado in cows was fairly good, as Montâ€" real buyers, as woell as several farmers, were on the market to get a supply. Veal Calves.â€"Veal calves were more flen.tiful, about 130 being on sale. Prices or the common class were easier, but good to choice veals were firm,. Prices ranged all the way from $2.50 to $7.25 per ewt., and bulk going at $5 to $G per cw*% Feeders and Stockers.â€"Market steady it the following quotations: _ Shortâ€" keeps, 1100 to 1200 lbs., at $4.25 to $4.50; feeders, 900 to 1100 lbs., at $3.15 Exporters.â€"No straight loads of exâ€" porters were offered, but a few lots were picked from amongst loads of butcher rattle. Prices for thess picked lots rangâ€" »d from $4.50 to $4.95 per ewt. _ Export bulls sold from $3.60 uo $4 per ewt. Butchers.â€"Choice picked lots of butchâ€" ers‘ sold at a range of $4.30 to $4.65; loads of good at $4.10 to $4.25; medium it $3.70 to $3.50; cows at $3 to $4 per swt.; canners at $1.75 to $2.65 per tw* to $4.35; feeders, 800 to 900 lbs., at $3.50 to $3.85; best stockers, CO0 to $00 ibs., at $5.35 to $3.00. > ~â€" Receipts of live siock, as reported by ELVE NO NAWNC MB AUTC, NWYs T NeCMAHOICH® the railways since last Friday, at the O Philadelphia, applied at central police Dity Market, were 51 carloads, composâ€" headquarters toâ€"day for protection. ishe »a of 883 cattle, 372 hogs, 179 sheep spoke rationally on all general subjects, ind 127 calves. but the police and coroner decided to The quality of fat catle was fair, betâ€" detain her for an examination. Mrs. Leâ€" ter than for several markets. waller said that she fell in with a party There being a light run, and several of Socialists in Philadelphia, and that juyers from outside points, prices held she was taken to a room there and made rbout steady at the quotations given at to take an oath against the President, the Junction market for Monday for heing told that she would be destroyed butcher cattle, . R if it was not executed. She said she Exporters.â€"No straight loads of €Xâ€" feq to Houston, Texas, but the men porters were offered, but a féew lots Were gollowed her there, and that she had then picked from amongst loads of DULCBOT | pome to New Orleans. There being a light run, and several uyers from outside points, prices held ibout steady at the quotations given at the Junction market for Monday for butcher cattle. London â€" Cattle are quoted at 10%e to ll1%%e per lb.; refrigerator beef, 85e per lb.; sheep, dressed, 12%¢ to 131%e ser lb.; lambs, 1414c dressed weight. Minneapolis .. .. .... Duluth .. .. Hay offered frooely, and prices ruled steady; 40 loads sold at $ to $10.50 a tom for timâ€" othy, and at $6 to $8 for mixed. Straw steady, three loads seling at $10 a ton. Dressed ‘hogs ane ttmnr, with light quoted at $3 to $9.25, and vy at $8.50 to $8.75. Wheat, white bush. .. .. ..$ 0 76 $0 00 Do.. red, bush,‘ .. 1. .. .. 99 0 00 The offerings of grain toâ€"day were a little more libenal. Wheat is unchanged, with sales of 300 bushels of Fall at 76c. Barby firm, 300 bushels selling at 52c. Orts a trifle weaker, with sales of 1,000 busizels at 38% to 39c a bushel. Ne eaih s 34 Market Reportsfl The Week. || NOT DONALD MBEAXN Toronto Farmers‘ Market British Cattle Markets. Leading Whest Marrets, Toronte Live Stock, May. July. 84%4 _ 84% 82% â€" 8114 15% 10% 16% 78% $2% 81% 814 â€" 80%4 10 50 10 50 6 T5 0 30 0 14 0 11 0 14 0 85 1 25 Formal Denial That Admiral‘s Mother Was a Princess, London, March 12.â€"A story that has been current for some time that Sir John Fisher‘s mother was a Cingalee princess was formally denied toâ€"night. Sir John‘s mother, it is stated, was an English woman, born within sound of Bow Belils, in the city of London. She was a grandniece of Ald. Johs Boydell, a creat citizen of the eighteenth century. Sir John Arbuthnot Fisher has been First Sea Lord of the Admiralty since 1904. _ He entered the navy in .1854, when thirteen years of age. He served in the Chimean, China and Egyptian wars, and commanded the Inflexible at Alexandria. In 1899 he was a delegate to The Hague Peace Conference. By reason of his visits to this country he is known to thousands of Canadians. gave her name as Mrs, W. B. Lewaller, of Philadelphia, applied at central police headquarters toâ€"day for protection. She spoke rationally on all general subjects, but the police and coroner decided to Philadelphia Resident, Who Talks Raâ€" tionally, Tells Strangs Story, and Says Socialists Make Her Take Oath to Kill Roosevelt. New Oleans, March 12.â€"Declaring that her life will be taken unless she assassinâ€" ates President Roosevelt, a woman who THINKS LIFE WILL BE TATEN UNâ€" LESS SHE KILLS PRZSIDENT. | s eEvery . | 7 wo Minutes WOMAN WITH MANIA. Physicians tell us that a!! the blood in a healthy human body passes through the heart once in every two minutes. If this action beâ€" comes irregular the whole body suffers. Poor health follows poor blood ; Scott‘s Emulsion makes the blood pure. One reason why the blood. It is partly diâ€" gested before it enters the stomach ; a double adveanâ€" Most housewives judge the purity of a flour by its whiteness. White somchow signifies purity. | But while flours are always white, white 5::; are not always pure. Royal Household Flour is the whitest flour that is milled. It is also the purest. You may think the flour you are using is about as white as flour can be. Yet if you ;]lacc it beside Royal Houschold our it will look yellow by comâ€" parison, Ask your grocer for Royal understands that you mean it. tains 130 pages of excellent reci some ncvemublished before. \}c))?r grocer can tell you how to get it FREEK, Ogilvic Flour Mills Co., Ltd. "Ogilvie‘s Book for a Cook," conâ€" SIR JOHN NO CINGALEE. eca 4 6. t the ©1 wl lis l M mel th at €d W W clare she : 1¢ hir ara win _cld to ible. 7¢ @T will be of her such she #c her is not 1 the d C for n word fror onc att #he W n the pi ten i faith! rt ne w Your M D M n The Lead packe At all groce n n ce T 11

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