West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 2 Nov 1882, p. 1

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"- ba, 6; 427.10,“! in th. by with. d... .erncau. tn 7... M'- ,uno. Ott h I " 101037, Film th hair 0'- rib-rid loll-mun“. an». in.“ to Mid " pound a... My UE. " lls t,'lt new" no, "tcr, In” I Doll. "I Irv-uh "or 'r.eerrtix ji'" H '" lam; at... I'M! h: v all uni“ making heat. Alain-p uni "I rue. .3.” -i It: In; M: sloth. lug-Vin. Jun. p‘m air. and: And *3, PT.tind All . ate. - Wyn: on. uni 0.1. . with. '- Dru. King’. In. of [ Moss. (all. "no... no. mil “on. In! an" .0“... Wu than 'utOlu, 1.0.01wa DURHAM. Iprlng sud Summer Fashions: regular) native]. A. I. h “an “vibe 0.0057.qu - I Bosid---orposite the CMIIMI Prod-y- tuna Church; P.tlt; 'i'iteei6ettttone, Infant". Ar., "tt (ut,'at'."s'eo2"r'fti'P"""'"'"""'""r",,,'T REV Fulk 'IoTEL, but. .00“ 0t I.“ - nun-o in - ot am: though " tl,'. 9tetmsts wul non-c - u my other and: On - we ptr, and no strong-u Linen “and - Bale “canyon it " am an: be - Wm!“ M now the Ines! um. was my Iron: '" to “a. I ICrl.N.ib'.Ir AUCTIUNEl-lll, fur tbr A than" of Gray. Annual: Min-(tome! to ht all ”it: cl In. County. u "Mon-bl. 15km thmthonl‘umquI-nl Land [blue-"fully “so“ mm the up. un- yummy"; M409. JOHN ROBERTSON [18mg TAILOR AND CLOTHIERJ‘H-‘j I BEG leave to nnununee 'thu I In? “Douala-lam o nun-n n tllllM'rtitrpAt,f'yi,Eiii gm‘ Wf41t no“ In “0000.”. At"tyliut Stock nr undo to "it! 0. “on Notion. IARKDA“: T BPROU LE ' Pu 1,1Pemu'e=eiqrirJ,'sit" nt,'so3t,tt.t"tt. . 'tttttra " I Anlnx'l 'bttoltso"st-ory Mon Iny and rum-”mm mun-Incl mm.“ 5 p. m. Mud-II lunch 10th "79. '" , I "rto Lnnninu Sr'."',',,',"."",-, London and Lu: 'uhnu Lite, Insurance Ga. "chant". Fin tn. nun-nu an Wuu-rh-o In!” rm human Co. "ue-t In.“ nu inn-Inn” Co. Aer"HV mum. Cotupsuay. All "II'IilIl'll prsrat"tr " Mn-IMI to. “no." In].- I... Mon-o Ion-l. ym 't'tli. fowl-n! _ 'lyttt bug p.031 [mug I ammo" hum to n, thoroughly "may“! b not want! to Ilunu' In than mainly “and “It?! Mari nu...“- honlln "in. than ucummodn- a». tu"""""'" Truck". '3". " - . pm Fla. (1.. My). cannot”: with no Home TEE “Marika is wanna to Boa-iv g“ In. U .o- the “cm! noun, I“ fqéfdlTl'l','lGiellt'lf, nor-cum“ Aqoo It nun-ma. New Furnittir: Wuerooms, GEO. KRESS. , [Cl-INS!!!) At't"r10.NrlER for the [County of “My. Ito-Moan: Ind on». in 'r "in. tbrttmq "tart"tod lo I. Toll or eon-try .1, run-mam. “not. ”urn- " . Sunny, wm visit lIurhun on”, 3mm: 'totau--trun third Til-uh) (Ftil Duly) to the out! of "my nip-Ch, than he Will bo moat My,” to I.“ 'trt." A“ Pre tttmt may fan-r him 'l'h nun put- a A... l- A'. ...-h ant-“nun! tn him u.” in. My. VETERINARY SURGEON, ( , lulu] VI'tt I lum'l‘onnlo "new “Var. In any town in. I.“ "ei. - Impg- A1 rod “and '4) bib cull born- Lynn! m the, “In! and mos: Approved I vte, unnatural, any of ttso loading [mum- ot To. Jt, lano- ' 'onllouv Dog-k!!! .oqotee* crummubmm,m.mud ttgina. ot be.) 'sows.iaéeitod [no Okinawa. - ADI-ah. he ' adv-mind Chm in]. . IL“. “arm-ulna“ bum ruin... A Irma. - than “comp-Mod by In A“ mains-chute the canary. on int-crud mm! lorbMdon.and charged " "ml" "at -do.de-er-.-..., _.. ‘Pnndduuunmlonpuhl um Tutuluqlgldo.’or your _"ttt W - ' "r-tii-ua- I can. you Lili hr no Inn-m. “a I qqqtq ”In. layout 0 'te-ti-u-Nor-ie, noon". P2,l',2"PiR', and Anomey'I-nl-an lullcnon. In Chums", Connysnccn, “a. an unnumhuv-n-umd n Ila-howl. Ola you only ThuM-y u hunch". LIPIUII) F3091. J.W.rRotN,LL.B. thwuaB,roh.t4,t87s County Crown' AtMIcy June “a ,lllo. no.“ .Ico.~Wiu[h|m -‘VIQIIn-II... Peer-to -.- .I... u no! - vuu- ll”. t KN bilthl, AGENT. LomUn Ind ou BUSINESS DIRECTORY. in“)? VI'tt " Ontario Vetrirmry Col ' amino Paln‘l I)"; I‘m. Up," To.) inn-m. "I“ “a 5min-- an!- no Inch .Iolo, I. In... w. M. CLARK. Architect and Builder, Cutting done to Order. Alexander Robertson. L 35257-134} 12in: iiiirl a.ucll:u.l. a. “THE GREY RENEW” JACKES n mum”; 7170831413791 19w, trotieitom, he. no 01... “ulna _ Una 1'0!- E. D. momma, new“ . AT . LAW. ".--orrtrtt I". ac. NIX()N. Oman Palm'- 0m. tttam. Ovary “Thursday. MISCELLANEOUS. DURHAM Sr.. DURHAM. HUGH MACKAY. H. STEVENSON. 32111-18 or mum-131m. JOHN MOODIE. trout at Front. TAILOR, J. TOWNSEND. Publisher. MEDICAL. MAR H-DALE. DIS'I'II'I'II. " "ILIIIID tk JEROME. Literati-tr GEO. K3388 tre woman: R. A. PRINGLE‘ mo ym new no .4 " (mums-r: new of mum”): and no. t, MHSTIL' Lh'ATiIEPs8, 2_Alun Illa-gun gnu vuiuy. A u-londla lot of 'l'lnr.an Lou an Manlimllyrlitnnted on the panel 6;"an U "'oym,omtoetto thy widen“ Pple,', Ta"Se'W/'. any m van = the pnnclpgl Btroet, in Upset Yorrt,omtostto we residuum M Gro. Junk-on. .1, may no v0: , a“), ban Don and u . PMWM. and no no" to than the p.rirteWI LI bronze: into the Town for sue. Sum the opening ot q Mn; to a. Town olDurhun " hubocomoono ot up but lake!- lu Outside Ind It no dU8agtt "r. nu "an upload“ "on W'II'I. in) in... a urn-almanac than of no“. J. E. unmet. 309.. bu no. Grmttgx"gefe, III Stan-home " Oh. Shun-.00 I Juno Ital-lea Mrh. and otha-- quphh build“:- of I “luau hind. Durban u notod In!“ "lo-did do". And Hutch. his“. tar do: llvaeut thaa [.11le Lett I. "te urea-r .otbqto u an to: on. or att an Lots. A”, d I“ 0... at to P. P, "CB. THESE Lou m trot"ttitatl.vpitmsted the lumen»! Street.“ can" To“ om TOWN of DURHAM, County GREY, No. 8, 4, 5, 6, T. 8, Hunter's Survey. East Bids 0mm:- tit., North chuck-on BI. Building A. "mason. Proprietor. Durham Juaser6th, 1.1. And nun-ha Wuhan u: all In Mu. _ “this but in: all“ untold-l "pi. Repairing promptly amended to. Before you; “In." an Ron's work A utr am and tu, "tiaiUtd. can.“ "a.tthro can fod easrttot “if to In" yourselves. Tun-nun cum-1 fl Halal-rout! Albert M“, Lower Town. Durban. mum: mum Priest paw for mam, cut-sum 5nd Talluw. Durham Perb.7ttt,t0M. y)" Bot? Open & Covered Carriages, G. WARNER, Lumber, Lumber, Shingles, Shingles, Lath & Lime, P, r'reerred to take Conrad. for Brick ' Mono and Wooden Building- . Sash a Door: kept on hand P9Ns:specittcatipns and Bills of TE I'm-inns: formerly carried on ty T. Eaton u Tat",', a Curiae 2tt ha chasm! bum- Mt blow “palatal“ y Lumber promptly' iniliii, out. A an mum“. lniafutlon mar-nun Ordn- l-lt " Adic's "unit-n no: Upps Tum-mm prompt? attended lo.- E. DI ’CRACK JEN l '. 1yyr,e.'lueee,yukte?.': on hand . large-tack ot 5.811.000" nil all kind. ot Buuuin-riaitr,auo u “out of Moulding. in 'Niuttt.tto-ood,tout om. Pu-eiBectiotri 1nd Bullsofhumhtlmadeoulou 2al notion. A (“Huh-cl orc-tttn.. pun“ than {and Trim minnnlw-non trod Atskuas'Pateut Met-lie Glut Burk] Cues kept in "oelt. - nomombn nu truee--a "ort din-lea nonho “no Post has". SHOEMAKER'é 600 Hush. Fresh Limo. Durham P. o., Mt? Mth,i8tgt. A ".n'g'A'ILAt". .llA-Il " II-K - an "I: I of both [Muta- uid cGuar-iu'aCCriiii on out" rim or Village property " low"! rim of mun-n. Bud-m _ tttsuite-at Ind emu of In.” mud to the lowest. 0mm. A. A. PRINGLI. Lover Town, Durhum. TY, undersigned has . Inge ttmount of both privato and (tonm-nv fond. on Inc"! Gena-31 Banking Business TRANSACTED. Miriam In) 19.1881 Money to Loan. Th'?, BANK mun Letters of Credit on am: Ttrttain And other Paula: Conant”: Buyout! Collect. tttor'dntt Flaots.rqi', limo-duh. on New Tort and .u put-010nm. DEPOSITS of " And tttntards Beech-d. upon wink}! the current nte ot inure" I will he tnnvved. thoitsut6,000,000: Reserve $1,400,000. BANK or common, Changed Hands. 9...: must: Carpenter a 0011mm", m' It?” M f COLLECTIONS MADE T THE ROCKV'ILLE MILLS. Also --a.N.0-- Blind P‘nct ory. nooiirihrr,i, I'Bt ME HAHN Ttss LEATHER. Durham Planing Min: sun. noon who has had a good exporionco in IN DIR SJ‘LE Cid " ,GAN'H sump-unmy of J'Ols’rs. Lot ",Con. , W. (LR. Bentmck. J, W.) CRAWFORD. Vol. Ar. N o. Should Call and Eaimftrt CANADIAN 'n ("unmade term-mud DURHAM. --stu of the Best-- "iiiliht itihtttt ttttiiNet, " 1.3 - EDD. McCBACKEN. his}? F“: ”to _ y In "176 The nurse said it "I the saddest exper- ience of her career, to see that besutiful, gifted young woman, with kind friends. a loving hull-Ind. nnd a beautiful home. who had nu hot life khan pndo in ignoring the Bible Ind the Christian Sabin“). turn, when 'leath came. from everything the bud prized to the little dunked book. and die with the cry upon her lips, "I wish I ha! known it tmtorxr."-.-Hott" and F imida. A strike of 80.000 Lmunhiro miners bus bean "and by 3b. ovum granting-n in. tro.“ at In». . By tho and) ot Sir George any Mr. Gladden becomes tho Senior Commoner on the lint of Her Mqusty's Privy council. Sir Gcorcc any wu cworu in on Much I. 1889; Mr. Old-tom on Scotcmbcr 8, IBM. Tho nut Commoner inwnler of date in Mr. Mil-cc Gina”. who I'll sworn in?” July 8. IN6. c “I Will: I had known it befoto," she "tld our and our, until the fell into I sleep from which Ibo never awoke, and that mul of regret, Im the last word upon her dying lips. "It cannon). pouible." 9b. mid; "I am: ”nosed it pouiblo for death to com. tonic. What was the pmyor you and. auto? 'thtr Faber wbiehm in bunn.‘ Say it with no, husband," Ind be did so. "Not If he?" have [wen So thatch. w. Inn-6' always nude Sunday a leiduy. Pape go! itrk Shut wny in Paris. We have tom ts ett popular places ofamusemeut, ol comm, 'ttt an" to church. I have We? thought sham the Bill“. I did not ma it had humry merit. I had nu idel it was written in the simple, henlxtiful Itylo of the portion you have just read. I with I had known it befom." A' fen hoths PM“ but dibease hok n fatal turn. The physician um: um] told her that her time on our“: was very show She would hover no “other sunrise. "th, t d'ot"t how. I never thought mun-h won: it. I never ettttd a. Bible in my life. It win a minor orpride with my father to never has a; Bible in the hon». Bot did tltU one come here , 0113i: i, 't"trr--er pocket Bible. It it strange you uhonld Mu surprised me into i,ten. ing ttyt" chapter, and that I should haw been no charmed, And not kn” to when: I was listening." "Tim in [annual I" who said. "the,' will an“ I sensation? Who wrote it , Where did you get it 'r' “What did’ you lnppoje was in the irae, if not something good P' ulna! the num. uriomly,yot smiling. in up“. of herself, M her patient“. has of sunrise and "undul- ity, "ch ull certainly htard the B.Tle mu! in church t" asked the nurse yt am prim.. _ - The nick wnmen listened ntierstively, untilthe nnne rinsed with the worth, "Alumna people were astonished at his doctrine, for he taught at one hnviu: 'tu%ority, and not as the sclibes." "Why," will tbe nurse. in nstoninhment, looking with surprise at her patient and thinking M first the was wandering in hrr mind, "it in the Elk; Christ's Sermon on the Mount, you Know." "That in the Bible! Anything so beautiful and I0 good u that in the Bible t" "And seeing the mnltitmlr he went up into the mountain, snd' when he was set hits disciple: came unto him, and he open " his mouth and taught them, 'rnyiitg." Her Bitter went Into the next mum fur a book " poems, Ind while she was gone the prolessionul guru. who at heside her bed, took limb the pocket of her plum dub wrapper, a small Biui,' opened if, and be. gan vending in a subdued voice 2 A beautiful woman " on a bed of nick no" in In elegant random-o and one of the tinest and mod fushiounhle of Boston's broad avenues. Sim Ins nurmundod with every luxury. and nttondedl’y kind triend,s,' auxin:- to anticipate ovary wish mun re: Hove the monotony of her weary, painful dun. in every pouiblo mnnuer. One " ternoon she opened her eyes and said, in a low wick voice. "Bad to me, plenrw. Ob, do", bow I wish there wan mum-thing‘ new in ikatUf ind winner in the literary world! I um BO tired of everything l" Sad Death of a Fashionable their mother. no. IN be . Won“ by tho Rocky Bungee)“ Blu- Ood! on Io thin walnut: bundles. Tht. The bird that In Each-n6 "A! hurting has been, In] "eqrq,amt and room to “punt his free pin. Arormdroamhi"-d.inth.rotum-ttr, At noon I. “all at from the mmrlm a can, mil 1 In." din. like . prince by tho Moehy Sum»; Eton: this happy mo tum: my In." to moth-at. in out any an. no 1 '"teu- Ott,wtaen.xrittt the span, cum. than bdrm and My “but; no" tau. in} ii ploughing in "mW' Of inn-u! out.” I". I. NU-Blowing studies, I would not ell-up photo v t h (hind-'5 Queen; Right proudly It. at: in hee Bueungham PM I! m - IAIJGIIR. mu; m 'bueo alight. um my old wanna neck- a. - out my throat. fortMtttottungis In, menu. "on- " the {m6 of Arum. are. And It“ I do! an. by the Rocky Eugen. Emu-"hon, " ”Main-m. of I mouth old Gagatmsa RmuLWb Oct., INN. Andu proudly t toil by my Rocky Rangoon o-mauu’dnm-n called tt" Rocky sm- DURHAM, Co, Grey, NOVEMBER 2, 1882. Whole, 170.242. POETRY Lady. "T "tr. q“ a c".- nus nspccts. The epistlea of Paul do there- fore abound in All variety of "ptwuriotrtttut Ponuecliun wttlt the radial. the progrov sive and the distinctive forms of thin grant truth. The writings of Pull no indeed, one continuous exhibition of Chad and Him tsrtutitied; bu. 5 few quotations from them will mice to indicate bin Man of thought on the sulsjoeb-i"Christ In": to- deemed as from the curse of the lam-being made a com for us g" "II. was and. tin for us who know no sin. am It. might be mad. the rightoomnu of God in hint?" "Wo are reconciled uanod by an dank of his son;" “We no htstitfed in Hie Mood ;" “We have redemption through His blood, even the forgiven“: of the;" He “in our pence." m “in our life," "He orooit in mndennto In wisdom, Ind right. eousness, 3nd tsanetitietatittu, Ind redemp- tion." We may than go on in a long series of collateral. intermediate, and con- ucutiu forms of the great Inch. In! the quotaeons, In In" Just mule. my “in to prove our position. l (2) Paul qustMtsd by his '-ot"ded cul- ture to show the perfect unity bl nll the parts in the economy of -.--tu nub out n with a. ”mail of light the link, um connects mm with Christ, and than that man is and thronghchriu hr hith in Him to the mild Ono. Thin to: Intro and no sooner hu ho pun-M it to the mind's eye in the our light of have. am be proud; to thaw 9mm “option. "tl “WM opting the on. Prepared specially for the Review. we 'P.'" in measure order, ttttd oil her- " g. The upeciel "sitting of Punt to set moment; with eeeh other in porteet unit, _ ' forth the grand and diatiuetive doctrines m marks, out itruilBr y'".""" in "'.'T of Christianity. Poul wee 1 men of high thud formula M welt u {n "".t tmmripk - culture end greet erudition. In support with number or m one 'rtthjeet with tr"." of this statement, there is maple and con. u" t'"dittr from "ul terutiruttitstt itt l vincing proof. m was born and brought cp?' "tutitud. The love of Chi“ Ite ' up in Terms 1 city in Cilieia, tumour foe points out, ia the source M." “mm" . protiesuuey in philosophy. Now, it isclear ".'.oro1scrf oor. g,U,ttr. The appropri- to tt certainty. that a mm: othis erdr-nt ntion of Christ, he points out: is the coerce temperament end “on tutsewubhitvsouid of tttl ehrintinn growth-Wh. 4,16.16. I not live in that place, without being im. I' designed by God in hie 6eettttM'toneg , lined with the spirit of philmnpliy. and it him to the Ipoetolle Mice, Punt Itas, in. with there doubtless that the faculties of deed, wet forth "I tbe essential truthl of I hit mind were formed in . metaphysical the gulpel in. their distinct individnelitler, mould preporetory to enquire into the na. in their monifold rclntiou, and in their , ture of things. to compare thingl one with line Pe"."": A. aitomt br trim, not the other in their connections and to set one of them is dunno one from the other [ them forth with logical precision. Besides but .tll of them "a a” .'" WW?" and the intellectual and plastic tuttuenees, uni "ttrits Ayll the ports" m the circumfer- der which he lived in Tarsuts, be out at the t.t'l.u and" converge to a” centre ot fat-t of Gamaliel nnd was tn tight “cording the circle, Mo the (note, “I. doctrine. tbe to the perfect manner of the law. There pretest'", a" promises, out tttreartertinas is Lsre, in Paul's education. three things contained in ”My writ, “I ooiateide the one worthy of note. The trim, thing, is the with the other and all meet in the one grout preetuiuenee of the tcncher. Gama. gruud centrul uutit in tl" economy of tliel F?!” It man of fine natural talents, in grtMNh I (ripe scholar and dirtingnished teacher. he (3) Paul qutdified by " mtutroided in suid to have been held in such high eh culture to preuut the truth in form: Bait. teem, that on his death, the Jews lurid ed to the various conditions of the humor? . "The honor ofthe law failed, and Phari: mind. und” tUs ham”; there in" id imim‘ died.-" The second thing in the my classified various difference: of opinion i perior mode and quality of the instruction. ttnd culture among men. but oti? “M ‘11ij placed before no in the “picnic: in simply to draw attention to three tt --"taught uccording to the perfect manner than: " enough, to treree the end .. h"‘ , the lsw" i, e. according; to the highest in view, Tue, tint elmsa, worthy of note; that“. of "eelleney h,”I as to the matter u the peculier notions of the Jun on thet and as to the manner of communicating it subject of religion. Judaism, th. religion to the mind of the pupils. Ontiialiel did of the Jer" luu, I deep spiritual lie-Moan“ l trot touch the more traditions and fume of " i butit tma in tltis reset ' so much ( the ceremonial law; but he taught the mieunderstood by them in the 1'hitt'i' I great principles and spirit of the moral In, tint they regarded religion. not in a thing i which tongue. ths comment”; lays down Within them but as . thing without them. l the rules of lite, and bmuatitiet, the churne- Tu, prided themselvel ou their ““000- rte], Th? third thing it a siiiw 011).". nit: tion with Abnlmtn ttRer the fuel" they Img at tho feat of Gntueliel.’ Thin intim. viewed their high priveleges not " much are: the position of the scholar under the " tue favors of God, " the marks of their inrtruction and training of " teachers, superiority above all others und they cou~ nnd it him. in reference to becoming thor- tented themsdree with ll" I"", trtrews of onglt schvlnrr, passed mto the tulagc-- religious oimervantmr. Attustorhed to the "Put thyself in the dust of their feet," i. e. proceuel of irttempeetion, he nominee the you must empty yourselves of all self-suf- epriugl ot notion in their inner life, turret- tieieney or no]! complacency m order that all the intricate operations of their self-dc; you may. from n do”, “my. "(immanent caption. rind shows the you innpiritunlity 4t.eten with eagerness ttr tilt 'r.termition,)o!tutiwsureiy"sttttfrtetnin_,tui.r, profit Aneh by the expel ions-band cotiitihsrrl F‘"i'*n'F"d tls tAmtStetiGertthrk tit tWt? ly drink in the wisdom ofinen famous fort teudtirtiotrirrtmntss . Moréorer, by A thor. nlility and learning. Paul was, under .oush auttlrsis of Juaisit, based ott Ill"? Umnnliel. an ardent earnest and close stu- i knowledge ttnd inrge experience of the ml” dent in all the ”and.” of Itusrning 'unoog lject, he shows the noctity, integrity end the Jews. n, wag, irrSred, a continual extent of the hor-TI" luv is holanIt and and diligent bearer of that great doctor of good. It its the l" orerrtttioty m qrhtt the lov, Gamma. and he hiut/eoPtteqti'sttt- understand: it reeea‘rblee (but hero " ho ly, a learned and liberal education. Doubt, qmsutly mentioned in history, wiut believ- leu, Punt was a scholar of the highett4 ed that he bed done nothing to long or order; but his active powers. intensitist by any tbing "maiuod for him to do. No 1" his intnlleettml revere, deserve .pgcialtlntion of his lite, no moment oi his - mention as "rml'tfktrtions " the grant no N” of bis dnty, “I! be withdrawn Work,~in which 1,, Wrttt destined to play n from this universal empire of the meal very conspicuous mr'.--we can ell per- law. To obey in every thing, to obey ceive the active hut-it, the feIVent spirit, i always, to obey perfectly, such h tU tttt. the strong will, the warm 'tmeta", the chungeeble rule of tis eonduct. PM“: ill-t tender 'umsibility, the exercised intellect;1 deed, forms B mirror in which men of “I t the IM-‘peetivo tendencru of thought, the i - my read Ute motives, the "tiottg Ind I (1) Paul, qtuditUd by his many-sided culture fully to unfold the grand central mulls of the trosrpeb-The doctrino of tho arms is the grand central trutbin the econ- omy of ”nee. It in accotdingly laid down in holy writ us the roort'aought of the gol- pel by all :he holy man Inspired by tho Holy about; but it in in ImrtieaUr given to Paul, " the great lngicinn among the sac- led writers, to defiuo it in its peculiar sig- nificance, to show it in its great compre- housiveuess, and to set it faith in its uri- 1hif eortseiotrstternr of his own inward " tory, the eombintttiott of Greek and Help raw training, the thorough grounding of the mind in the luv And the Prophet». In one were}, in " the aspect: in waich we can Vinw him Paul stands on brain“? r.ud qoalilied to plaee before the world the gnml esssentials of the Gospel--- Ministerial Culture. Ito. L-Hthnrtintesd.) a hnvm-Wm consequent genttittetsestt or fuleeneu of their religious life. The second clue is the required culture of the Greek. Pen] knew Hellenistic Greek, bat he had no knowledge of classic Greek. It is now generally neknowledgsd thnt even the apostle rim ea tttttrt bsm.TToeed'to have re. ceived a learned Greek education. Hg certaiudy displays greater facility in writ. ing Greek than Palestinian ap‘oetlel. but this he might easily acquire in Asia Minor. and through his extensive iutereourse with native Greeks, some of whom were per- sons of learning and distinction. 80 view tl in the light of critical research, he was not in the proper sense of the term a mes ter in the walks of Grecian literature; but he Was beyond all doubt a master in the regicns of pure thought. It wasuot, there- t re, as it great linguist and famous orator but us a deep thinker and a close rensoner. that he exercised? on the minds of the Greek: a plastic iidunei. m wet. tml, the one hand nude in epeech i. a. he wee unpmtieed in the polished end euphon-i ions [engage of elude and; but he was. on the other, endowed ,tith'hhtt intellect- ual powers. 31:6 he had been plant! in ur- enmstianm propltnoa to their teit devel- opment by his an“ incidence in Tame. when Ivy and?“ than-ulna I. Inch. saith S'trn'bodo M "ttity at philoeophy. and all the Iiual seine“; " that they exeelled the men of Athena“ It!) of Alum ondrin. end of all other phéef dgihmted to the study of the edeneee. He gained the ear out! rivetei the ottention of the Greeks, not by the mom“ of the elude Greek but by the tom of his pri'e‘tio'el intellect. He {cnnd no hull with Inn " to their linguistic "lint-tr-Ah. the cookery; ttVtowudeu him-ell interior fe Asa, in this rupees and woman thei heathe- tie dislike to the do“ to Hamish-M index-notes ot he team by his aptly oritytotlmn inch “Mont almofhiethen‘hte. Von-moi. wi telleehnl m be not when equal in th-UU-tttrt-d-l, mu tb- -.t of dbl-Gen he - M thee-opt», when the - all Christianity-non. h. Insulin-Ml them all. abject. he keep-h viii "rqh-'.--"An i - br. niMl -r4ttmtietaa, I fen-l an that db Ital - - out ofthe other " the neceeury eequenm ' cf thigh in Christ ermMed. There in hem I ' th" eeriee of connectione the one {allowing the other in eneeeuive order, end ell her- l monizing with eeeh other in peru" unity' m merks out eimiler conueetione in gener» I ellzed formula " well es in one pnneiple' with another or in one euhject with mother all proceeding from end terminating in! Christ erueifUd. The love of Chriet he F points out, in the source of ell christiru’ morality--2 Our. 5, 14, Mr. The appropri- ation of Christ, he points om: is the eonree of I“ ehrietinn geowth-Bph. 4, " Ag designed by God in hie denguetion of him to the epontoilc Mice, Paul hell, in- deed, set forth ell the e‘eentiel truthl of l the gospel in their distinct individuelitiee, l in their meuifold rcletione. and in their l fiutr aihiputiour. As shown br him. not a one of them is dweree one from the other ( but all of them no one, in principle end [ spirit. " all the poiute in the eirenmfer- I once of n circle Converge to the centre at l the circle, so the facts, the doctnnee. the " precaptu, the promises, end threeteninae l contained in holy writ, All coincide the one I with the other and all meet in the one l gruud central trutlt in the economy of I grace. t l union-‘1'“, “I. m" ot" rou." tune, his Chwu I Li o/rodeuterum"stml, ohm, th. duh. will“ aim snails. put on. I fit',".",' 1t'X m: hue q-ttret-o-tlr-rr"' ' - 1artan P " ' -dal, can tttty '-errtqat"eaittisreo"t. . Lied-n ttttedt. A. Axum": tho.r.--The {mowing tt. iling our: of in With noblomn. re- otuttly W. in " by m. mupond. ronl ot o ”Army .-ttse duke," he It”. “It on: in church when I colloc- ' in "uso-d " non» charitable - 'b. [dub begin to go round. ind ‘fl' aa-tut-ttist-aio-k- u “a new» A My; ihicb' he laid on tho pow bit. hill'rudy to be traurUrreii to the plain. Buido him "t 3 little snot., who; sttrtiiug thin Action. imituud it by ‘ oaurthtiouslr laying I sovereign alongside "l" dttooorin. This WM too much' for auis duh, who dipped his Ftrtsd into his "asodkGtrshoM'trulud out mother floriu, whieh IU lad by' the side at the first. Tho tittl-ob tdtIoweuuit by loying mother sovereign in“; au' M133 m. (no. quiet- -Iy added . third Artie.", Which vol cupped Ty tho third Intuit}! or the part of the ma. hob: ou nah i Mrth s'rriu to oretrtin'id%u indict» and the little snob tri-ttUte “In“ sovereign u on“ no. the bird.’ Tho duke.'not to be m. prod-nod“ Mi Tho incl: but up " In.“ at urchin»; odou- hh‘ouly a“ thou: into the "tr,' 3nd tho- - may Iowa-d. his' rtht,. a in. cooling. "I that“ mutt. y'mr'eedtolhe- on the "tfersistongobo. " vsh. the Creetor of Ill things end the DU. i poser ofall'evesite. Be eoounetd to their: ' the glorious gospel of the blessed God, he 1 pointed out to them the peculia- dogmas. of the cross, which Appeered to them foul. ishnees,hut wee the wisdom of God and m. power of God unto solution. end he con- i tinned to .tvoeate the cause of Christianity with such success that it spread over the length end breadth of Greece. m evolv- ed eaten. them e philosophy as well " a tuougr--A philosophy in direct opposi- tion to stoieism. epicuresuism and all science {steely so-called. but quite in we. cord with " forms of pure howled-gs. The third thing is the philosophic spirit of ell Ages. Faith or belief is fundamentel to ell the operstions M the mind-We can not think without belies-thy we an not spells without believing. we can not act without believing: It is no less necessary than ( fundamental to the processes of thought in l " continuous "twelt utter the knowledge of ttsings-We on not enter on the inven- tigetion of things without believingme csn we can not make my primrose in the in. vestigation of things tritnout believing. end we on not rise aloft on the wings of es. l pensive thought to explore the regions of the Unknovm without believing: What is it the! “its. so much sublimity; in our irr. wgirtatious, to the great names of Galileo, Columbus, Descartes. Newton,’ Bacon and P'.P unless it be their forth in the truths with which thev hail enrichedtheit minds? l _ Faith or belief, thus so essentiel to abstract science end so universel in its application. I is treoed by Peel in its reletions to the grind doctrines of the A5r’ose.’ First. taizh respects the word of. God in record to the stoning "ersiiit' oi" Qhrist. Second feith rises up to Christ, 'of whom the word of God is a description. Third; pin. tppmu prietes Christos set forth in the Word of God, not so much by on intellectqu as by e moral ect of the tgthtd-W. come to Him, We receive Him, we rest on Him, we qsortfh% in Him In! so on in " endless for"! Amtitai am. Not only is the gen- ersl necessity of {sith recognized by Paul, is e‘ greet principle in the economy of grece; but this principle in it, enjoys im importhnée,', Ind ethihite effeets whieh l prove that the gospel alone has seized the I principle in sll its (one, end spplied it in ell its extent: in e word, tliet it alone hes thoroughly discovered end fully "tutud the wants of humsn nature. Again. as argued out by Paul in ecccrd with the un- ulterehle low of things, similar ere the con- ditions, the ends and the issues of Ieitlt in. the gospel and belief in phifimrtift, We - the truths of the one just " we re- ceive the facts of the other and in no other way. We receive the truths of the one. " accessory to e spintnal freme of mind, to [ grorrtbiograes end edvenceznent in the divine life ', the other, as accessory to pro- gress, to discovery and invention. We melts the truths of the one, end the facts of the other our own in their ultimste out. - by thought end prsctice. There iv, indeed. a common principle running " much through the one as through the other and consequent unity in " the puffs of it. Hence; non of culture; in my one of the world who devote themselves to escertein whet ldees are coneeeled under the greet fecte of the gospel, to penetrete into its spirit, and if - so express ourselves, construct the system of it, can-not retrsiol from “ministration. while refketitrg on] the connection of parts of that great whole, their perfect hormouy with one soother, I and the harmony of each. mth the per- manent chancteristics sud inertingoith- ou wants of human natuiie. In tine. Psnl's anelytie end synthetic processes in the presentation of the truth, " consecu- tive trains of thought in the demonstra- tion of the truth, end his appropriate use oi insegery in illustretion of the truth, ere " in ttttes sword with philosophic teete sud eels never " out of harmony with thy philosphio spirit’ of my ego. I him (helm (Part I thmtinrsed.) he futon to Db Cumin his gold Intel: ma slain, which be 153155 mm his pillow l? tho home when he Ltd sCept the “one in More. Ont, showing Mu um be "In raid for Hm of Rammed an! fay rc- mini tuidid mt behmtt * him Could in h rel-sandal to ”up: M have]. m to I. was. “room ”not boy-Id of ttit - hith- ful wife m: mgdlél'. con-My Ttttft' earin for or on m. we! . n ungk‘tlltr in their helm“. W” "g m nailed 'r dim and tho lync- I cult! have a has.» “sung, the ranch and Intel. vaginal, hlootl pumied. sud ”In. in] prim-u "torunuostod, we Ian-I. haw that mm- In». only up my”. . Eh an; but bud Work ti, main n man gasp! I'm“ tum of [honey wing]: a but] burned. Th. honest {elk/w had unveiled oh moi? sboés iisttre 10(55ro fur nu hour The [tumour- enter without. confusinu. walk Around tho centre table, select what dink“ they like best, Ind thou scat tum. ulvu It little m-rblo tables math-rod in the room. Eur, person remembering that his nciglibor may “my tlilt dish of which he tmrtakes helps himself with mod. mh’on. For tho dinner a fited mm u cursed. about thirty-nine eentr, but wine, but Ind coffee. being extras. the guest tell! how much of each he has drunk. His word u taken without question, at no one watches him. 0n board tho steamboat, three maul: s thy are served, which. lmwewr. sm- not in the prim of the mango. After ouch mad the passenger who bu partn'mu write: his nun. in I large hook, and records tut. der it 'ritat be In. 'ttttau or drunk. - "hod, tuets,"rh' an'wereul. "could I our gulf erect. and lark' people in tho queues Ind correlative of Emma“ Mitre" like Stephens. corrupting elector-Al purity " in fountain bsM.--Globe. m 61131115 25: of. servant girl who brought him a gold heat. which In drop- ped on the unions evening, whnl'odinphy' Tin traveller in Rummy and Sudan no: may customs which indict“ that an people no “palm-ll" eottrtrous Ind hone-t. At the milwny dining Button: I laree (“do 1. "t in the centre of a. spacious Mum, Upon it I." dlsphyod very leuupting dishes, nnd Pius of turn: plat". mu. knirm uud forks tad napkin. When he u rudy to go [whore haul!- on. of the wttitars--. gal-who puts tus prieo “till“ ovary item, “his up tho Imuuut ind put: the sum Uh. receives into her pocket. When the money becomes too heavy also gives it, without counting, to tho Ilewnrdeu. All is loft to the ham-v.7 of the pmplo. [and of thin ednfideueq bog-mag levity it makes everyone careful to this Interment. puny. His hows! is u stake, tbeufm In his obliged 50 be wry metal and pu- timing 1‘Why didroinot koopit?" he pllyfnlly. The Emit Kent Plairedeater, alluding to the revehtiom " the Revision Court in Cwlden, mph: 1lte,tolbrrite,. Fuppe.stiv. remark; :--Ots. need not' Co l-oyonil tho bound. of Buthwcll, " oven " Camden, to peg oplto niwd the whale theory <Totr tni-rust-,-. 'tte'rrtmttttured eon- Itituoncy. I corrupt voters' list, a but. " dishonest otrieiau, a Hawkins for I upm- untativo.|ud Sir John A. Madam“ us Print Minister. Every link m the chain. our, qtoqte in tho pile, was then in tho spirit, if not in the ttrah. Given A single bout of In extinct mimul and I mknlist will (inedi- itl appearance Ind habits. From I careful study of . nulh'ell return- ine adieu. with a Camden yoters' list for I text book; . good olvurver can, without lining seen them. infer Sit John Undou- nld. Sir Chale- Taper, uud the rule of force Ind fraud, corruption and monopoly, nude}: which the canntry now “I'UIIIS. Continua” like Onderdonk. sucking tho liftbioed of the must). ugthe untunl u- 9? votes, from. mm Ot In. oath. Messrs. D. Marv-my; I. P. P., and Mr. Hausa", P. M. trfChat. lmu, appeared for the “daemon. 'rue result in Unhiden G. not Ur" wry ditUrent from that in other put. of Past Kent. In Hume-ville the Reform”: by Impeding obtained I slur “in of " when. and in Dtuden so, linking with Citadel) 't votes, with some Minn-1 unto but on man on the roll " "ii'i,'iii' son," and the ynutll we: born on the 35th on". may. 1868. The Mountable June. tite. phone, the "rtttrttorakee who" fraudu- lent return in the In. Botlmell content In- not been forgotten. mule use or thin oot"eutttseiesa “senor to get hiu son‘s lune tm the roll when it I231 no mm the“: C lg Ind perfumed lain (rel " we“ tui every one of the upped: can. from the refurm side: ml 'vahtttlt, 'Nry (nund halt with the um tho and: 1.o mun um ten-rm niacin“ ”may Tory found “all will: the my the work had bun done; Judge Bell, relating 11:th numeral" inst-noun! th- (and, in. formed Mr. Crag! (Int. he won” "port hi: eorrupt net: to the government, whom duty it Would be to puma. him with the heavy pEme and ponnlitin to ‘which In hid rendered Ilimsell Iinlvle by tho viola- tion of his oath. Messrs. D. Marv-n"; y, An Honest Nation. woolen “senor to at hi: mn‘a m the roll when it had Bo right C " hadperfunuod hi: ink on .I V m an: the only was rand . 'LL2l'u'l'du"iiur'itT ymllcyc-au. “his a-.. md

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