West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 16 May 1907, p. 2

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dead or absent; but, inasmuch as there was not a house where tl:?_!u not one dead (12:30), the wo in some cases must have meant the "most eminâ€" ent," or the "best beloved." In this sense the term is f tly used. 30. Groat eryâ€"'l'h?q!';.pt'nn were ex« cessive in their manifestations of tgl. *They whipped, beat and tore m mat plague t.iod is represented as deâ€" scending in person to punish the Egypâ€" tians. The firstbornâ€"It has been sugâ€" gested that this might not in every case have meant the oldest child in the famâ€" ily, as that child might now have been come upon sinners when they least exâ€" pect it, and in their moments of fancied security. The darkness cannot hide from God; we know not what will be in the approaching night. . The wicked may awake to find that the stern messenger of eternal justice has seized upon them. â€"Hom. Com. The Lord smoteâ€"In this ie c C AVYSCe as from God and reverently worshipped the orne who had promised to deliver them. III. The firstborn slain (vs. 28â€"30). 28. Moses had given careful directions, and now the Israelites are equally careful in earrying them out. 29. At midnightâ€" God‘s judements and it still perpetuated in the supper, the Christian‘s memorial « 27. Bowed the headâ€"They recog the words of Moses as from God reverently worshipped the orne wh promised to deliver them. â€" WKarq___ _ COCTCCCU AnC thelr children‘s children, and the â€" annual Passover festival would be a constant reminder of this duty and of God‘s merey. It would lead them to love, trust and worship God. It continued _ till Christ our Passover was slain for us, and it still perpetuated in the Lord‘s anvectcare Mc Ne S sk :s t II. The Passover to be kept as a memâ€" otial (ve. 2427). 24. Shall observeâ€"The monumental character of this feast as a perpetual reminder of the supernatural origin of the nation, and as a means of education to all the generations of the people, is here minutely emphasized and enforced.â€"Terry. _ An ordinance. . . for everâ€"No human authority was to alter or set aside this institution, but. in order to keep in remembrance God‘s merey in bringing them out of Egypt and His {l;dgmentu on their oppresors, it was to observed anoually and _ celebrated with solemn religious jJoy as long as they remained a distinet people. 25. The landâ€"The land of Canaan, as He hath promisedâ€"To Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Keep this serviceâ€"It was to their "national birthday anniversary," and needed a special commemoration. It was first commemorated by making this date to boe the IsuimmGes â€"m ow 4 door, and only behind His wounds can sinful man be safe from the destroyer." â€"â€"Whed. Com, II. The Passover to be kent an a man. 22. Hyseopâ€"A bush with an aromatic odor. It sometimes grew on walls. The lintelâ€""The upper door post"" (v. 7). With the bloodâ€"The life is in the blood. ‘This typifies the blood of Christ which was shed for the sins of the world. None ...go outâ€"This regulation was peculiar to the first celebration and intended, as some think, to prevent any suspicion attaching to them of being agents in the impending destruetion of the Egyptians. There is an illusion to it in Isa. 26, 20, 21.â€"J., F. & B. During the night the lamb was to be roasted and eaten with unleavened bread and bitter herbs (vs. 8â€"10). 23. Seeth the bloodâ€"The blood was a sign or token (v. 13). It was a sign of Gods merey, love, protection and deliverance; it was also a sign of the obedience and faith of the Israelites. The Lord will pass overâ€"It was calied "the Lord‘s passover" (vs. 11, 27), beâ€" cause the destroying angel passed over the dwelling of the Israclites, while deâ€" stroying the Egyptians. "The destroyer, whether angel or pestilence, could not pass the line drawn in blood. Each sancâ€" tuary home in Israel was thus made a aymbol of the fold whereof Christ is the es WLr . BSBd ' 2. The taking the lamb on the tenth day. 3. The striking of its blood on the doorâ€"posts and lintels of their houses. 4. Their eating it in haste." remtriznes 4 o5 d Ssd fect, (2) innocent, and (3) slain as a sacrifice for others,. (4) "He was offered at the season and at the very hour of the m sacrifice." (5) Not a bone was (6) He is able to take away our sins (John 1. 20). According to your familiesâ€"If there wore not enough perâ€" eons in one family to eat a whole lamb, then two families were to join together. mrabbiu say that there should be x::. ten persons to one paschal lamb, and not more than twenty. "There may hcmtolpeuoutohedwmthe limb, though there can be no lack of food for them to feed upon. Every man ‘acâ€" wrdh.toh'neufiq‘my!u.ttoflie full upon Christ." â€"Spurgeon. Kill the paseoverâ€"The lamb was to be taken up on the tenth day of Abib, or Nisan, and kept up on the tenth de: of Abib, or Nisan and kept until the zmrtumh and killed in the evening. "The rabbins mark four things that were required in the dirst Passover that were never required | : afterwards: 1. The eating of the lamb | in their houses dispersed through Goszhen. | / extire, whole, sound, having neither deâ€" fect nor deformity. This was a type of M.Seel!ohlfl;ll’u. 1. 19. The ‘Suviourâ€"tbe Lamb of God was (1) perâ€" s FEW yir llae V us s Aaron full instructions (ve. 1â€"20), u: mow they proceed to instruct the peop \(Â¥v. 3) through the elders, A lamb â€" It was to be without blemish (v. 5), that is, was instituted. 21. Moses called.... the eldersâ€"The Lord had given Moses and A new epoch was about to begin in the EP‘W] m In commemoration of S OWL CC 2202 ACORC CCE â€" HRV Sguted (vse. 21â€"23). "Upon retiri from Pharaoh‘s presence, Moses J Un doubtedly withdrawn to the land of Goshen, to make arrangement for the departure of his people, which he now saw to be close at hud.Thqhsdpm- bably been gathered thither by degrees ue _ _ i. T00f THEVIEEâ€"I6 was to national birthday anniversary," ‘ded a special commemoration. first commemorated by making uies K m S esd Christian‘s memorial of wARP TPBE C tell of God‘s wonderf‘;ll their children and their m & L , the feast of the Passover 1. The Passover insti 2270 I0 tHC I@IN~ now have been smuch as there tl:jo was not wo in some he "most eminâ€" ved." In this They rgcognfi;.‘j' judgments the Caravan, _ Into this the engine of the wrecking train plunged. The train hands jumped, but MceDonald landed on a handcar, his head being badly crushed. He was taken to the hospital, and died an hour later. ‘The remainder of the crew were not seriously hurt. McDonald‘s wife and mother reside in Winnipeg. Conductor Daniel McDonald Fatally Inâ€" jured at Portage la Prairie. Portage la Prairie, May 13.â€"Daniel MeDonald, C. P. R. engineer, resident of north Winnipeg, died at 1.30 this afterâ€" noon from injuries received in a wreck at the depot this morning. ‘The unforâ€" tunate engineer was in charge of a wrecking train which was oing through to the scene of Saturday‘s wreck. The switch engine was working in the yards, and the men left one of the switches open. It is understood that the new service will come into operation on June 15th, and at first, probably for the whole of this season, it will run three times a week, but that it will untimately beâ€" come daily, the officials entertain no doubt. d c The new train will be faster by 12 hours than either of the Imperial trains that now leave here, morning and evenâ€" ing for the West. Canadian Pacific Will Add Another Train to Transcontinental Service. Montreal, May 13.â€"So great has been the pressure of transcontinental trafâ€" fic that the double daily train service between East and West has been found insufficient to meet its requirements, and this summer, for the first time, the Canadian Pacific will run t,hree‘ trains a day from Montreal to the Paâ€" cific Coast. 1 en ow 2in tss t dnt i Arthrad < the Passover, but without any sacrifice, and so unwittingly, but surely, bear conâ€" stant testimony that Christ our Passâ€" over is sacrificed for us. The last supâ€" per commemorated the sufferings and death of the great Paschal Lamb who gave his life to save a lost and ruined world.â€"A. C M. paration of the gospel of peace" (Eph. 6; 14, 15), with hands grasping the stafif of promise, let us go forth on the jourâ€" ney of life to do his will and magnify his name. VII. The remembered lamb. "This day shall be unto you for a memorial .... mor in this selfsame day have I brought your armies out of .... Egypt" (vs. 14â€" 17.) Even to this day the Jews keep kess NWys L iccn hn LBi ‘hee I l VI. The protecting lamb "Thus shall ye eat it with your loins girded, your shoes .... your staff" (v. 11.) Shiclded by his blood, girded "with truth" for service, with "feet shod with the preâ€" paration of the gospel of peace" (Enh. said, "My flesh is meat indeed .... he that eateth me, even he shall live by me" (John 6; 55â€"57.) 1. A social feast. They were to cat it with "the houseâ€" hold." If the family was "to Httle for the lamb" they were to call in a "neighâ€" bor" (v. 4.) Our neighbor is the easiest to reach, was his first claim, and is the one most likely to be influenced. "Beâ€" ginning _ at Jerusalem" is God‘s way | Clke 24; ‘47; Aots 13 8.) 2 & semel feast. "Eat .... with .... unha.vened} bread" (v. 8.) Leaven sepresents corâ€" ruption, fermentation, impurity, earthly passion, unholy desire, unrest, rebellion, disobedience and selfishness. 3. A solâ€" emn feast. "With bibter herbs they shall eat it" (v. 8. Txoughtlully, subâ€" duedly, considering that the feast was at a great price, even the death of the tamb. His "head," his "legs," and the "purtenance" (v. 9.) "There is nothing in Jesus we can afford to leave unapâ€" propriated. He would fill all our life, satisfy all our being, and lead us into the fulness of union with himself,." s 0 e t Rmteee Uy the decision of the Jewish Sanhedrin and the Gentile authorities, and was the pubâ€" lic and official sacrifice of sin. 4. Subâ€" stitute. The lamb must die or Isracl must. Christ, our Passover, the firstâ€" born son of Mary and the fristâ€"born Son of God, is sacrificed for us. V. The eaten lamb. "They shall eat the flesh" (v. 8. The lamb was not only to be slain, it was to be eaten. There | was af east as well as a sacrifice. Christ died that we might live. _ He lives to strengthen and nourish and satisfy. He smy WWHEL moor s sB aCt Urespas®es and sins (Egz;i&l). III. The Lamb of (John 1:290). Here "a lamb," as if there were but one. A white. gentle, patient lamb. 1. Spotâ€" less. "Witnout blemis? (v. 5). We are redeemed with "the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot" (1 Pet. 1:18, 19). 2. Set apart "In the tenth day....take. ... a lamb....out from the sheep. . . .and ... . keep it up until the fourteenth day" (v. 3), and kept until the fourteenth (v. 6). Christ was proclaimed in types and shadows for four thousand years. 3. Slain. "The whole assembly . . ..shall kill it" (v. 6). So Christ was sacrificed by uko e s % o 0 hene O @ AUmaens bond, deed, note, contract and letter written toâ€"day, by Christian, infidel, Jew or rationalist bears the date A.D. 1907, and whether they will or no, is a teatiâ€" nrony that nineteen centuries ago Jesus of Bethlehem, the Redeemer of men, was born. When we believe on the Lamb of God we begin to live. Our years in ein are unnumbered. The hour of our apirâ€" itual birth is the beginning of our fife. Before we live in Christ we are dead inl trespasees and sins (Eph. 2:1). HEAD STRUCK HANDCAR. T e ols o9 o i t Ts um n o "My ewon, God will provide himself a lamb" (Gen. 22:8). II. The lifeâ€"giving lamb. "This month shall be unto you the beginning . of months: it shall be the first month of the year to you" (v. 2). This was Lsâ€" rael‘s birthday, The year of bondage was ended. 'l‘ia year of redemption was begun. The Jewish age began with the exodus and continued nore than sixteen hundred years. Then at the end of the age Christ appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself (Heb. 9:26), and time took another beginning. _ Every Kalude s Ascla sn #: 7 & r c 1 most lamentable and frantic manner." How dreadful must have been the when there was one dead in every house. No such wail ever went up before or since. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS. I. The provided lamb. "The Lord spake....take....every man a lamb" (va. 1, 3). Redemption is God‘s thought. Jesus is the Lamb of God (John 1:29). "God so loved . .. .that he gave" (John 3: 16). Abraham, the great type of the heavenly Father, journeying to the place where Christ should afterward be cruciâ€" selves, and when a relative died they ran ln_',o the streets and howled in the THREE FLYERS DAILY in answer to Isaac‘s question, TORONTO ter wheat crop. Mr. Fish found busiâ€" ness and railroad men in the west hopeâ€" ful of continued business activity. While great damage has been done to early fruit in the south and test, Mr. Fish said that he did not see any of the damage that the "green bug" was reported to have done to the winâ€" Stuyvesant Fish Reports Little Damage to Whneat Crop. New York, May 13. â€"Stuyvesant Fish returned toâ€"day from a 7,000 mile trip over the Gould lines in the southwest. the dirst inspection trip that he has made mince his recent election to the directorate of the Missouri Pacific. Mr. Fish said that his trip had convinced him that the country is all rightâ€"west, north and south of Wall street. ‘ sitting. It is probable that there will be a formal sitting on Monday. Sir Wilfrid Laurier again objected to Premier Deakin‘s scheme, pointing out that it was an absolute departure from the doctrine of constitutional governâ€" ment to provide money in advance withâ€" out voting it for a particular purpose. Neither resolution was put to a, vote, but the resolutions favoring a universal penny postage and alternative cable routes passed. Mr. Lloydâ€"George said he did not wish the Conference to infer that the Government‘s attitude towards the ideas contained in the resolution were purely negative. So he proposed an amended resolution, expressing the desirability of devising means for systematic consultaâ€" tion between representatives of the varâ€" ious parts of the empire to further the objects in view. Sir Wilfrid Laurier said it was not desirable to pass such a resolution. He believed that for any practical schemes for improving cable communication and navigation, which would tend to proâ€" duce unity, the various colories would be prepared to vote money, and that these should be dealt with on their merits. ence the common fund shall be devoted to coâ€"operative projects approved by the Legislature â€" affected by the general purpose of fostering the industrial forces of the empire so as to promote its growth and unity. s Mr. Lloydâ€"George thought there would be more to be said for the scheme if the fund were to be applied to Imperâ€" ial defence. _ He felt it difficult to reâ€" gard the resolution as a businesslike proposition. On the import figures for 1905 the duty would involve an approxiâ€" mate contribution from the United Kingdom of £4,500,000 while the contriâ€" bution from Australia would be only £100,000, from New Zealand £20,000, from Canada £400,000, from Newfoundâ€" land _ £5,000, from Cape Colony £$40, 000, and from Natal £25,000. Thus the United Kingdom would pay €1 10s for every £1 paid by all the selfâ€"governâ€" ing colonies _ togecher. The scheme would be unfair to Canada, in that she would be compelled to contribute four times as much as Australia, the populaâ€" tions being 5,700,000 and 4,000,000 reâ€" spectively. Toâ€"day‘s precis is a lengthy one. Mr. Deakin opened by proposing a resiluâ€" tion recommending that in order to proâ€" vide funds for developing _ trade and commerce and the means of communicaâ€" tion and transport within the empire a duty of one per cent. upon all foreign imports shall be levied, or an equivalent contribution made by each of the Legisâ€" latures; _ that after consultation _ beâ€" tween their representatives in conferâ€" ence clearly indicates that between the ardent Deakin and the fiery Jameson on the one side, and the immovable repreâ€" sentatives of the Home Government on the other, Laurier acted as a buffer, Deakin opered by proposing a resoluâ€" tunate collision. ports for the purpose of improving Imperial trade and communications, which the persistent Australian Premier had unexpectedly brought forward. But, apart from this,the whole trend of the dubate's on t?ml.otl‘lcr phases of preterâ€" ’ London, May 13.â€"As the Conference draws to a close, one thing emerges from the obscurity which semiâ€"privacy has cast over its proceedings; that is the great influence which Sir Wilfrid Laurier has wielded over its deliberaâ€" tions. _ An instance occurs in toâ€"day‘s . proceedings, where it is to be observed“ that Premier Deakin first and then Mr. , Lloydâ€"George succum»s to his pressure on the question of a tax on foreizn imâ€" ’ Laurier PREMIER DEAKIN‘S RESOLUTION NOT PUT TO VOTE. NO TAX ON _ FOREIGN GOODS. SAW NO GREEN BUG. rier Preserved the Balance at the Conferenceâ€"Speeches of the Premier Have Made Preference an Issue in British Politics. o ae A. RAMSAY & SQN CO., Paint Makers, MONTREAL. Ask your dealer for Ramsay‘s Paintsâ€"or write us for Post Card Series "C," #howing hwmhmamm No mattter what you are going to gintâ€"the house, porch, blinds, fence, terior woodwork, barnâ€"you will find the right Dpaint to do the malntics 2t.t. the right paint to do the painting right in WSE'S PAINTsS. * _ _Of Oshawa o * miscraigw. ,TO°ORt0 â€" Lordon EeaTarfeopie A Pointer in Paint The city was brilliantly illumi and there woere several torchlight cessions. No unpleasant incidents recorded Orleans, France, May 13.â€"The annual festivities in celebration of the deliverâ€" ance of this city from the Envlish by Joan of Are commenced last night, but without the participation of the clergy, who withdrew in consequence of a deâ€" cision of the municipal authoritie â€"to permit Free Masons to take part. DISCORD AT FESTIVITIES AT CELEâ€" BRATION AT ORLEANS. The general retail business of the eity is hardly affected by the strike. ntuihotdctatin trlt 6 d i im s 1200000010 the service over tmne eniire «ystem, Last night most of the principa! streets were deserted. It is thought that the telephone strike is now in a fair way to be settled withâ€" out much further detay. ‘The «eneral rotail nnoinaue x6 Â¥kLQ ib i San Francisco, May 13.â€"The local sitâ€" uation involved by industrial troubles and particularly by the strike of the employees of the Union Railroads, which has already led to serious rioting, toâ€" day is more reassuring. The police showed toâ€"day that they are fully comâ€" _petent to cope with the strikers and. their sympathizers, and it does not apâ€" pear likely that the aid of the militia will have to be evoked. The success which attended the eftorts of the Unitâ€" ed RailrÂ¥oads to run cars yesterday will result in an endeavor to operate cars over the principal lines toâ€"day, and if there is no recurrence â€" of the rioting which attended the previous efforts, there will be an attempt to reâ€"establish S lc cce s & LICE HAVE NOW THE STREET CAR TROUBLE WELL IN HAND. STRIKE AT ‘FRISCO. JOAN OF ARC. brilliantly illuminated, several torchlight proâ€" ind it does not apâ€" aid of the militia ked. The success ftorts of the Unitâ€" cars yesterday will 615 Pender were their li +_ m'"h;‘:d.;’-w:: r supplies in even th.t.-t"nneufiinm In fact, as a wholesaler said recently, they are mostly busy making excuses for the nonâ€" ] Flour Prices. Flourâ€"Manitoba patent, $3.85, track, Toronto; Ontario, 90 per cent. patents, $2.75, bid for export; Manitoba patent, special brands, $4.50; 2nd patent, $4; strong bakers‘, $3.90, Bradstreet‘s Trade Review. Montrealâ€"The continuance of fairly good weather has kept up the demand for retail lines and the expectations now are for a good season‘s trade in all goods. Generally speaking, retailers are not carâ€" rying heavy stocks. In most branches of trade they have been unable to obtain the full amount <f their orders, so even . should the spring and summer trade be light on account of the cool weather, it is not likely the results would be as Cdisâ€" astrous as would otherwise be the case. Wholesale trade in all directions is reâ€" ported very active. Large shipments are being made by boat and the opening of navigation at this port will still further increase the voiume of business. Collee. tions are gencrally reported fair, The wholesale dry goods trade is as active as slow deliveries of manufacturers‘ shipments will permiit. Values all round hold very firm. Price advances are reâ€" : on foulards, sateens, cheesechoths, m etc., and flannelettes and gilks are expected to advance further. All hardware stocks are moving well. Metals continue i active demand and are firm in tone. mdemn.ndtorgrmiais ‘ improving. _ Sugars are holding the reâ€" ee;t advance. orontoâ€"Wholesale dry goods houses here are doing a handâ€"toâ€"mouth busineas in & great many lines. They are getting their supplies in amall lata ‘a«..4 C _P_CS romlowing were the closing toâ€"day on Winnipeg futures: May 4314e bid, July 85%%e bid bid. Oatsâ€"May 38e bid, Juh 130., creamery .. .. . Chickens, dressed, 1b. Turkeys, per Ib... .. Apples. per bbl.. ... Potatoes, per bag.. . Cabbage, per dozen. . .. Onions, per bag.. .. . Beef, hindquarters. . .. Do., hindquarters. . .. Do., choicec, careass Do., medium, carcass Mutton, per ewt.. .. Veal, per ewt... .. . Lamb, per ewt .. .. .. Do., mixed. ton .. .. . Straw, per tor .. .. .. . Reeds reâ€"cleanedâ€" Red clover, per ewt. . Alsike clover, per ewt Timothy. per ewt. .. Dressed hogs.. .. .. .. Eggs, new laid.. .. .. . Butter, dairy.. .. .. 00 Do., red, bush, . Do., spring, bush Do., goose, bush . Oats, bush.. ... .. Barley, bush .. .. Peas, bush. .. .. Hay( timothy, ton Dressed hogs are unchanged, with light quoted at $8.75 to $9, and heavy at &8.â€" Wheat, white, bush with sales of 30 loads at $13 t:»*l'»':) a ton for timothy, and at $10 to $11 for mixed. Straw dull and nominal at #13 a Lon. Toronto Farmers‘ Market. Farmers are too busy on the land to bring in grain, prices of which are pureâ€" ly nominal, One load of goose wheat sold at 68e a bushel. Hay is unchanged, ud . cin 2: Per ns : hi C Hogsâ€"Prices lln('lvdfigo(viza-vif;..'fiarfifl got over 1.800, and quotes selects at $6.50 aw} lights and fats at $6.25 each,. Sheep and Lambsâ€"The run of sheep and lambs was light, and prices were firm all round. All offered were readily taken at higher prices. Export ewes sold at $6 to $6.65 per ewt.; rams, $5.50 to $6; yearlings, $7.50 to $8.50 per ewt.; common yearlings, $6 to $6.50 per ewt.! soring .ambs, $5 to $3 each for bulk of offerings, but $9 and even $10 was paid for two or three of the right kind. trom $40 to $55 and a few at $60 each. Veal Calvesâ€"Prices ranger from $3 to $5.50 and $6 per ewt., and an odd new. milkâ€"fed calf of good quality brought $7 per ewt. Milch cowsâ€"Several buyers from eastâ€" ern points. as wel las several farmers, who were all wanting good cows, eausâ€" ed the market to be strong. All cows approaching good quality were readily picked up. Prices ranged from $35 to £70 each. The latter figure was for an extra choice cow. The bulk would sell from $40 to $55 and a few at 860 each. gards numbers, he only having handled 150 during the week. Mr. Murby reâ€" ports best steers, 1000 to 1100 lbs., at $4.25 to $4.75; best steers, 900 to 1000 lbs., $1 to $4.40; best steers, 800 to 200 lbs., $3.900 to $4.25; best steers, 500 to 700 Ibs.., £3 to $3.50; common stockers, slow sale and not wanted. Feeders and Stockersâ€"The _ demand for fat cattle was good. Harry Murby, whose business is largely in stockers and fesders, reports a slim trade as reâ€" §3 Butchersâ€"Picked butchers‘ sold from 85 to $5.30; loads of good. $4.60 to $4.90; good cows, $4.25 to $4.60; mediâ€" um cows, $3 to $3.25; bulls, 1100 to 1700 Ibs., $4 to $4.50. _ leceipts of live stock in the city marâ€" ket were 106 car loads, as reported by the railways, consisting of 1681 cattle, 1851 hogs, 168 sheep and lambs, with 518 calves and one horse. The quality of fat cattle was good, considering the season and the darge number offered. Any other year the bulk of the cattle offered would _ be classed as little botter than feeders. Trade was good and prices advanced from 10 to 15 per cent. for fat steers an dheifers. Exportersâ€"Several loads of export cattle were on sale, which _ sold from £5.1 5to $5.30 per ewt., the bulk going from $5.20 to $5.35. Export bulls sold. at $4 to $1.50 per ewt. t M ‘, Market Reports| ‘_â€"The Week. } per cwt .. .. ..)..13 00 Winnipeg Wheat Market Leading Torento Live Stock Market. 38c bid, July 3876c bid. Wheat Markets. May. July. Sept. . .. 93% 98§% o6 «... 85% 86%% 8814 «++. ... 8548076 88% «... 80% 83 _ 8S4%% > +. 8778 8916 8914 «. .. 9014 9076 90%, closing quotations 10 00 & 0 .0 0 18 0 20 0 24 _ 0 28 0 20 _ o 31 0 16 _ a an 0 18 _ 0 22 2 00 3 50 0 on 1 00 14 10 13 00 10 00 13 00 5 50 0 G8 even at Wheatâ€" Oct. 863%%e 00 0 45 50 44 44 11 I0 Nept. 04 8814 88% 8476 8016 & 0 78 0 88 0 74 0 69 0 46 0 52 13 16 00 11 00 0 00 0 25 00 50 50 0 00 20 28 31 the rubber plant,." i) (O 78 Men, women and girls engage stores, who have to be on their all day, coften euifer agonies . chafing soresy soft coms, h patches, ate. In other cases, standing and walking leads to bad varicose veins and uleers. _ Zamâ€" takes the pain out of chafed sores, vents suppuration _ and ison f rto)c‘king;:dy::'u:d gonerally i:d- va NkLX * E: f _ Ottawaâ€"The volume of business movrâ€" ing is fairly large. Dry goods men still complain of slow deliveries, Fal] and winter orders are coming in brisldy. Local industries are busily engaged. Quebecâ€"Inclement weather is against general trade. The latter in this section is reported quiet, but a better movement is expected following warmer wenther, Similar conditions prevail in city retail trade. Outside labor is well employed, but the lack of heln i& aariomal.. a 1 ts (Philadelphia Bulletin) ell, t» e H;h{?t: -flifup;ot fllt b‘ m | _ Hamiltonâ€"There is now a better tone to retail spring trade. General lines are moving briskly, Wholesale businese is active, although hampered by slow delivâ€" eries of goods. Values hold firm. Col lections are generally fair to good. Londonâ€"Trade continues brisk in ali lines. Country dbusiness is a little on the quict aide, but an improveemnt is looked for as soon as the farmers aro through with eeeding. Building operations here will this year be on a large scale. Facâ€" ; torics are inereasing their plants and there is need for dwellings, J Winnipegâ€"So far spring trade has suf. fered somewhat from the unsatisfactory weather, The grocers report a better business and the hardware men are busy, Collections have improved someâ€" what. The opening of navigation in the canals bhas much helped the grain moveâ€" ment. The railways are making considâ€" erable headway in overcoming the blockâ€" aded condition of their roads. This be â€" irg the case, it should not be long be fore money is fairly free. Building opâ€" erations throughout the west are exceedâ€" ingly large. Vancouverâ€"There is continued activiâ€" ty in almost all branches of trade her. The coul strike in the British Columbia mines has not yet had a scrious effect. Wholesalo lines are moving briskly in ali directions. There is still considerable delay in deliveries, but the past week or so has scen some improvement in this regard. Values generally hold firm. Co|â€" lections are good in almost all districts. The shipping trade is heavy and would be heavier if it were not for the conâ€" gested state of the railroads. \ is a general fecling of firmness in all commodities. navigation and in groceries and hardâ€" ware «hipments bave been large. There delivery of goods, The volume of trade, however, is heavy. It is likely that it is greater than that of any previous season. Travelers are out with fall and winter samples, and they report the outlook as very bright. Orders are large. The deâ€" lay in making shipments to retailers may cause the latter to go slow on later onrders. The business in readyâ€"made cloaks and general clothing is very heary. Orders have been much beavier than last year, but repeat orders are also expected to be large, There is a heavy trade doivg in woolens and dress goods. All other lines of trade have become much more active since the opening of Dr. Root‘s Kidney Pills are a suro and permanert cure for Rheumatism Bright‘s Disense, Pain in thke Backt: and all forms of Kidney Trouble. 25¢ por box, at all dealers; OR. T. A. SLOCUM, Linited, 179 Kirg St. W. l Mre. Cam, one of the many cured, makes the statement : J coannot refrain from hfl all who euffer of my remerkable Peychine. In April, 1902, 1 caught a mvy éold which erttled on z‘:{ lungs and gredually led to consemption. lcol d not sleep, war m"eu to night n;n:’ my lungs were so discased, my doctor eonsider me incurable. Rev. Mr. Maheffy. Port Elgin Prosbyterian Chureh, recommended Dr. @locum‘s Peychine to me, when I was living in Ontarto. After v«ing Paychine for a sbort time 1 ate and @lept well, the night swents and emclfh ceased. Moanths ago J stopped taking Pey hine, as I was rer!ect!y restored to health and toGay 1 never elt better in my life. Psychine has been a godâ€" send to me. Mars. Axpurw CAMPREL Consumption, yield guickly Te powere af Fayohing, / : PASTOR AND PEOPLE! * palSE _ * | SO0OTHED BY ZAMâ€"BUK, f the grave. Cold: Catarrh. Bronchithe, Chille NightSweste Ia Grippe, Pneumonia, and other like Qouble:p:ll of which are forermnners of At all Conlcrs, 50c, end $1.00 per bottle. U nrot write to No medicine has ever effected as large a number of wonderful and almost marâ€" vellous cures as Peychine. It has had one es 0 roat, chest, lungs and stomach. Where doctors have pronounced cases incurable from consumption and other wasting diseases Psychine eteps in and rescues numberless people even from the A Marvelious and Triumphant Record of Victory Over Discease. PSYCHINE never disappoints. PSYCHINE has no eubstitute. There is no otker medicine ""‘Just as PSYCHINE x of help is serfously felt (PRONOUNCED SIâ€"KEEN) , ACKING FEFT , of 26 Forgue aveâ€" D nRW CA.HKI.‘.L‘ Cottonwood, N. W.T opening of to the cura s C..09°CCC wO@s ven thousand of these feeding and epeech â€" ma.lfi'ng orgies are held in London anâ€" nually, Such banquetting halls as those of the Hotels Carlton, Cecil; Metropole and the Trocadero are taxed to their utmost every night nine months of the year, each hall witnessing the absorption of rich foods and wines by about fifty thousand persons, _ A motdest actimata London, May 13.â€" The oppressive feasting of the Colonial Premiers i« calling attention to the great increase in _ the banqueting habit in London in recent yeats. _ Some revolting vic. tims indict the custom as a public nuisance passing the bounds of reaâ€" son. Enquiries at several hotels and restaurants which the banguet mongâ€" oers specially favor afford a basis _ for the calculation.that no fewer than ton S ron ces i i ie e G FORTY BANQUETsS NIGHKTLY Habit Has Become a Nuisanrs in * .. younger wheer the is Afoad i d s 12040114 casioned by the death of his The declaration alleges p on the part of the board ployees, principally in not 1 escapes, closing the doo dows, want of proper fire tive heating aparatus, no tem of fire @larm, insufficier to the building, and the loc beoeditt d 1 is d‘ Board of School Commissioners by + parents of the children whose _ 1j, were lost in the Hochelaga Schoo] fi It was hoped that these might | ha been adjusted, and efforts were ma to obtain a compromise from t board. The board, however, rofused recognize any claims whatever, A t~ ease has accordingly been entere | J. F,. Anderson, ho alnime #O noQn. â€" agres Parent x _, $ TT TCEIpiess, was tendm'ly Can ried from the boat to the steamer‘s docl. the dory being allowed to drift away, They had got astray from their veso! six days previous during a fop, They had been without food or water almost the entire time and had about given up hope of resene. The ery for help was then heard tinctly, and the ship soon after ran . to a fisherman‘s dory, in which were two men. The men in the boat wer an almost helpless state, only one ing able to move with assistance, and other, being helpless, was tenderly ried from the boat to the steamer‘s the dory being allowed to mhilk uuts ECCC UE CeRl At 1.30 o‘clock on Monday _meorning last, in lavitude 42.10 north, longtitude 65.10 west, the officer in charge heard a cry from out of the darkness, which at first he took to be from a seabird. 1t was repeated several times, and the man on the lookout reported that he thought it was a human voice, The night was intensely dark and a choppy | sea pre vailed. Captain Pierre was called, and the ship‘s course changed, and she wiaâ€" headed in the direction from which the sound came. ‘rent of Victim of Montreal Fire $2,631 Damages. Montreal, May 13.â€"Claims fa» They Had Been Without Food or Wate: for Most of the Time, and Were Almost in a Dying Condition When Picked Up. ing j y o ""w*e ty about fifty and persons. _A modest estimate bee average of public banquets at thirty to forty nightly the year TWO FISHERMEN IN AN OPEXN B0..T RESCUED AT SEA. a few traps, send messages brusque) rebuffing the agents, and this, not in frequently, has led to awkward mis takes, friends being sent away in amo» ed dudgeon. Some of the more experi enced are adopting noms Whote, but even this does not always protect them Many fall victims, especially to th« art dealers. Others, after falling in _ _ In pursuit of ln::. quarry the special "“’“’ m“ ivate card at the hotel office, and ucl for some Ameriâ€" can by name. If asked bis business he requeosts that his private card be takon to his victim, who usually, out of good nature, or thinking his visitor is a for gotten acquaintance, consents to | see him. Thereupon the special agent r veals surprising knowledge of the vic tim‘s career, gathered from handbooks and newspapers, but eventually hbe un masks himself as the representative 0j an automobile firm, art dealer, tailor o some other kind of tradesman. A Halifax despatch were made upon },h: PY ‘ of School Commissioners SUES THE sCHOOL BOARD HMis pian of campaign is so babbling, and even unscrupulous that even the wariest are often unable to escape his wilee. The hotel managers are trying to effect the suppression of the names on hotel lists, but they are often out, witted. London, May 13.â€"The wealthy Amer caa visitor to Leaisa has long been re garded as the ls, _ unate prey of tho British tradesman, but Americans have never beon so pestered with lettors an, importunities as during the present sea son. .A new terror has arisen in tho form of "the special agent" who in rea). ity is merely a trade tout. But the nLytion of new imethods has enabled him to mhfl energies into fields hitherto him. His pian of campaign is so babbling, YANKEES IN LONDON FALL vicâ€" TIMS TO TRADE TOUT‘Ss WILEs. iesents children ulio;I- e danger was SIX DAYS ADRIFT. ents Card at Hotelsâ€"Obtains Into:â€" view as Supposed Friocd arnd Goneâ€"â€" ally Menages to Make a Salc, secome a Nuisance in London in Recent Years A NEW TERROR. rescued f "HuHaren whose lives Hochelaga School fire at these might haw~ ad efloftfi were mad« t . sugqo ~, . < PEHper GÂ¥sâ€" insufficient protection id the location of the pon the upper floors; 13.â€"Claims for dam claims $2.031 Of his minor son. oges negligence up board and its om not providing fir greatest "CO"S and win fire drill, dofec the Protestan Six days and five then heard dis after ran clos: "'_l“ were th were in one beâ€" n the th tunit« in a :; ment you a . away fr would h time}y prever made this tere e mized in of deng carmag Carthy @rra n ce in th never and pursue eogmized in utm th H callin 'rt‘lfl wwhr stopper looking fi young dur ca pe oblivi And wi ROTrO W# right t will tel from a why 3 fatal d "Ha! | throwing "this is after a â€" port of 3 you abse and why searfully extend ing ture. # ®uC €id strange had tak ki iace smi own cou rapid ch then a fied re guish we She th reeled visitor folded hi and stan "My s you, ma clear, ge full, fine a charmi iT forehead af bovhe nest a stately light yel ing man returt W d O He san r with "In the tri Bec "Oh, m Onex s 004 ds There Stop e ery x3 wit th of wl thd

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