HomeMy WebLinkAboutPN1899_04_21J' "q WS Vii:
VOL. X
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ONT. FRIDAY, APRIL
Anal
Ig rbs•
fg, YOIING.
1 .'''trinity medic:
her of College of P
Ontar{o. - Office. Mrs
arias, Ont. Office
evening 6 to 6. Hilt
Friday afternoons fir
tial.
•~� Fefio
M D., C.M..
I College. Toronto, mem
'reiciaas and Surgeons of
Andrew's residence, Pick
hours: morning 7 to i 10
land Creel, Tuesday fan
m to 4.
0
.
•
Leval:. ,
m NTON, DOD'S. & MA DONNELL,
-J BARRISTERS. S.OLTCITORI3, RTC,'Tem-
pfo Building, Cor. Bav and Richmond treto
Toronto. At Claremont Tuesday.
Money loan on Mortgage `�TnN. Ar DREW pODB
FRANK DENTON,
111! and GEO. F. Id XCDONN E
r k. FAREWELL, Q. C., BARR
• ti rCourt Rouse, Whitby. ye and 10-4
Con
tiuligi � .
OW k McGILLI RAY, BARRI=
-ere, Solicitors, Ac. Office opposite Po
ofildf, Whitby, Ont. Jno. all
Dto W, B.LoanA ; 7b
A eGillivray,LL.B. a
Peters)
IT•
HOP;INS,VE
• GEON, Graduate
tnisary Oollese, Toronto
od the Ontario Veterinary
norrth and
Gree enRiver.
Locust Dill, Ont,; P, 0. a+
Ont
gustar0*
ry.
L
s
t
t
ERI' ARI SU*
of the Ontario `one
, registered memb
edica' Aesociatio
m one-quarter mil s
lepr,apb addree ,
idress, (Green ltiyer,
•
(garbs.
HO'lIAS. DUN :artist veffianeer, Com.
miseioner for
Claremont, Ont. 07
1 R. HOOVER, lfeener of Merrier/
• Licensee. Office at mill in day time an
at reeidonce at night. Green River. Out; 4 I
BUNTING, Itisner of Marriag
B• Lieeosee tor the. County of Ontario. Of
Toe at the store or at his residence, Pick'
iliege
THOMAS POUCHER, Licensed Aue
tioneer, Valuator, etc., for East York an
the whole of North and Booth Ontario. Buie
attention given to all orders by mail or telegraph
Obargee Moderate . Address THOS. POUCHEM
ox 47. Brougham .Ont-
-D-- .,
, . •
AVID
Ont-
DAVID BELDAM, )�ctioneer, die.
Woburn, eolicite sales trona his nnaoero
friends both fax and near. Bales of hums, far
stock and everything that is to b46 sold will .
banlned.by the subscriber with the utmost car
and so114 to th, very beet advantage. 09-17
FPOSTILL, ACCTIONEER,E'fC.
• Green River, solicits sales from bis num.
(irons friends both far and near . Sal.. of farms
farm stock. and everything that is to be sold wil
be handled by the subscriber with the atmos
care and Bold to the very Leiet advantage, 4€
•
f1 R.BEATON,TO NSHIPCLER
• Conveyancer, CornUtieeioner for takin
davits, Accountant. E: . Stoney to Ica
on farm property. Whitece le,Ont. 7-
�?iitr,:7 of 1:
I�Tait(I.
fit. George's Church, Picker:ng,-
6EItV10E£: -
VHnst-3?rirning Prayier
Sunday School
Evening Prayer
e DAT—Service and I3i1,:e
1
ana
2•0perr
'.ass
ala
•Ai ro, in.g in fu11 blast u4164 tie/hared. to' do
chopping and gr:sting at 411 ti hfea. Your
wotk dont er-:.le yc:. wart
Ftour, Brett, • y -
Shorts, Chop,
t.? rattail. Flour, Corse: ea i, .
Rolled if luat, Ifo11edI(aats,
AIWA', on hand and for sale at reasonable prie
Your chop ground to snit you. Coarse -Grain
taken in exchange for Oat Meal.
tt. Brokenshire� Plekenct, out:
is the time toPlace you
Y ►,yl order as, the sprin 'sea-
' aor is approaching an
we a
n hand to select from,
which
w sloea of%
t prices i.lducive to intending
ar
haser�e and on the moat liberal gerpms,
ll work guaranteed and every contract
tithfully performed.
.1
Granite
H. Ropki,-- Y
S.,
blI14
I/►,moi
',-'117k.1".60-401t4
44 111,
And Dentist, Pickering,day
yand night attend -
'ad
-ed b' Generalbadklmit ins'Laue find feet .sPe illty.
Also
dLaagblin Carriage Co. agent for
i4t $ iit$ers, just to Oshawa. New
/,,
Picker n
CollePickering,
ge
3&i8
Brlia
r
•
tie
In Jewelry are d
in their fr:'hne=
of design , nd re
nets of pr one.
found in
• White Me 1, 8
and brilliant
ih Ritc lea in Rose Colo
Grey Silver and
lar enamel etyl
•
4411.
1
taz"i-o.
igbtful
, beauty
• sable
•ey are
', ,
kiiog
• Gold,
e popu.
Heauly Pins in set.. with o without
ohaina. P ain o chased.
Geoff - Links of plain sn • tin ' 1 pat-
terns set wit. White
Stones, P . le 'or Opals..
Sflck Pie + —Emeralds. i• 03', , Opals,
Pearls, Dia o . • or rad-
iant.
ad.iant.
•,
Reg Isabela:, fl.sted 1-: , a .
h.kle to look 'I ver
date stock iib
pressed to boy
and see to a • d
I„
heart's cos . • 1.
• Yall orders promptly
:roe S. Barn
WHITBY,
'10Y1 itibt . t
towD corse
linos of
Te
:15111,.
free '?L cent Iines that cannot
Equal to any 80 cent tea.:
County.
wtity of
..
Stand
t
d
Ir
A- large
I: Y
Blue, Store
on hand for
c1oiii pri lit.
Pickering
Pharm
s.
F
0111041.%
I3adish
pions`.
And all green groceries pr
in the oity in stook twi a
the new Frail Shire.
0.
•
curd yonr -
I ubetn
Conine.'
to your ,
.
hrraker.
able in
tlr new
w TO
be beaten.
i the
•
ging in
c
nra.ble
eek at '
a ups
1 ropristor;
New Wm
r..
HEAD
Magic
It A.reining :
• PICKERING P ST OF
ltaiis arrive t*oin tot mite ti a
Closti TEISigloID ' • Te
Toel
; maned ozi all parts of
r
par oat
144 twos
utity
. Ulan
n
I•
104
•ire
=.i
ars•
OUT AROUND US
LATHY LOC 8A .PPkl*INoe tlitlol1DED
H , IT
THt PRIAM AND aortal) DOWN -BT OHS
COJRISPONDSNT*.
OLAREMONT
! • d+i -mow.. 11 ...c •..,lA ,
Tues
Peterda• y. a Macnab, Sr., *• in the- nay
Wood thiepea are- a good 'orbit this
Ppring.
thMesere, Georg
days; e fitokes iewith city friends
Talbot & Son €hipped -cattle from here
on Wednesday.
E. W..Evane and Miss Laura were in
the city this week.
Geo. Hughes has been in the city for a
few days this week.
Samuel Bray was the first to start
g rdening in this locality.
Near Atha on Friday. April 14th, the
wife of F. Buehby, of a eon.
' Mies Balfour, of Ash.btirn, spent a few
discs last week with the Misses Wilson.
John Barry will build a house on the
Bell premises recently purchased by hien.
Ont tinsmith has purchased a horse
and will pus a wagon on the road this
epri na.
W. Grebam, Alex Wilson, T. Caetr r
and others were at the Horse Show last
week. ,
The dam at the sawmill bad a slight
break in it the other evening, but is Rohlrepaired. - ,
Mr Waterhouse, of Toronto, and Nra•
Stuart, of Uzbridge, were guests of Geo.,
Wilkin on Tuesday.
Misses J. Michell and J. M. Storey
'were with Thomas and Mrs. Puncher, of
Brougham, on Wednesday.'
Richardson Bros., of Columbus, were
through here this week buying horses.;
They procured a goodly number.
Rev. W. 13, Findlay and Andre* him
ston attended a meeting of the Whitby;
Presbytery at Whitby on Tuesday.
Hon. John Dryden and F. L. Fowket'
were the guests of Dafioan Usenet), of
"Baodbe.nk" daring their stay in tb«
village. -
Rev. Curia. of Toronto. will opy the
Methodist ppulpit on Sunday morning and
evan:ng. Be,. Leggott will officiate at
Brooklin.
Owing to the Heti 3n of 1 the frost the
town scales have been indisposed for the
past'few drys. but are in complete work.
ing order again.
Hays yon noticed Dr. B odic e _ "High
land Beauty" buggy, it is ' ery no** fie
well as a comfortable vehi.le. W. Dows.
well was the vendor.
Peter Diamond mored t. a farm ;scent-
ly purchased by him nort of Myrtle last
Week. We are sorry to I. -e succi good
citiiees as Mr. Diamond.
John. Barry is waking reparations to
have the old Michell mill • oved to the
station and will put in a f il.roller process
and expecte to have the wl eels turning by
November 1st. .
Reeve Stark. Dr Bem'or, Ex -Reeve
Radcliffe and Thomas Tru tot Stoufiville.
attended the Young Liberal's ooncert here
on Wednesday evening. They were
pleased with the speeches. '
Gregg & Palmer will o er for sale I by
public auction on Tuesday fternoon nett,
at 2 o'clock, a large nunber of yotnst
cattle, milcb Bows, sheep, a •., at Wallop's
hotel. All the stook ii w bred and will
be gold without reserve.
Mrs. Cunningbauu, a f
sr resideni of
this locality. died at St. 1 athalrities on
Batwday, at a ripe old age, and her re-
tains were interred bare on iflonday a
the arrival of for morning train. Deg
ed was a resident here for any years
will be remembered by our o der reside>ea.
Died on Wednesday, A ' 12th, Jars,
Thos. Coates, aged 72 years. The
took.plaee from the resides of berg
George W. Coates, los 1, so . 8,, U abrido,
at 10 o'clock a. m., on Saha ay, April 15,
and proceeded to the Bei tis church here,
for service, thence to Bt. Pa l's cometsry,
Uxbridge, for interment. 1
Graham Bros. horses re erred frnfm
Toronto Tuesday morning. where they
were on exhibition at the orse Shaw.
The firm secured 1st prize and ew
-stakes in the Hackney close, with "L d
Roaebury". First and sweepstakes tb
'imam'," m'," and 1st and 2nd on Clydes.
Before the show ended one of the prize,
winners was sold for s good figure. We'
are alwe 'e pleased to learn when this.
enterprising firm make a good sale. as
they' are worthy of all encouragement. ,
Wednesday evening the Yonng Liberal
Club of Claremont hada gala date on, it,
being the ooeaaiaii of a public meeting in
the town hall when vigorous and able ad•
dreesesewere delivered .• by Hon. John
Dryden and F. L. Fowke, dealing with
the prominent questions of she day, or at
leae those appertaining to politics Provio'
oial. The chair was occupied by A. ! E.
Torrie in a very able way. The program
R as enlivened by music of a miscellaneous
character. Both political parties were
well represented, and the beet of feeling
pradailed. The hall WAS Dos spacious
enough to oontaiu the gathering, and
many were turned away. -
d
- " obers Madill hail kissed the Latirenoe.
E' farm on ibe 51,l1 of Scots. `
' C. Vanlaven has bought -8. Hall's fszm
v 66,6 lsh one. Uxbridge. and ie 'Moving onto it.
7 go pin Died, In Uxbridge. Towonbip, on April
world. &ib, 1688, Stephen $tight, aged 80 years.
ss• ' ;Funeral on Friday to Uttbridge estnetery.
By referasice to the ooutical minutes . of
at Tuesday evening it will be seen that azt
Life . effort is being 404114.0 hp s w g`
N i oto ix about to t I t-
sTe - 141 M 'sbr. ,
1899
Rouge Hill.-:
Drift hnntiog has been a popular
pastime her is abouts for some weeks, but
that has bee shelved and sucker fishing
takes its pl
The last lid of barberiam in the shape
of a toll gate) is to be removed. and on and
after Monda May let, we will have to pay
no more toll; Wallace Luke who has con•
dupted the g to for over twenty years bas
annonnoet1 a ale for the let of May when
be will die • of bis household effects by
`anotbn. Mr' Luke and his daughters have
been good ci 'gene and we are loath to lose
them while r !'oicing that the toll will cease.
We wish the Id gentleman- every success
in hie new bo' e. Mr. Luke has been 42
years in this l'oinity having oecnpied the.
position of bail iff for some 80 years. Old
age compelled \. im to resign the position.
Audley,
Nathan Orvis'is indisposed.
Some of our farmers have starts seeding.
Bliss Maggie Oryis is suffering from a
severe cold.
Mrs. Hancock, of Clarke. Is visiting her
sister, Mre. Bye, here.
Mrs. Boyer, of Greenwood, called on her
brother, F. T. Smith, on Wednesday.
We are sorry to hear that Jas. Fowlie is
confined to his bed from injuries received
from a horse.
On Monday Helena M, E. Bye passed
away after a brief illness. The funeral
took place on Wednesday at one o'clock
from the resident,. of her father to Union
Oemetery. It was largely attended by
neighbours, and relatives from a distance.
The bereaved family have the entire sym-
pathy of the whole community. -
Whitby
Henry Wilson is the suaceirfull purchas•
erer of the Beth C. Wilson farm at 15,625.
The Kirkland brick -yard and land was
not sold on Saturday. There was not even
a dummy bidder.
Fred Jones bas our congratulations in
being elected distriot deputy of the Sons of
Eptland. Fred's climbing up these times.
Rev. Mr. Langfelt, of Wycliffe College,
officiated at 81. John's on Sunday week,
and in the evening gave a eery interesting
address to the young assn. Rev. Mr, Roy
took charge last Sunday. and in the after-
noon conducted a special service for the
children. `
At Whitby, on Sunday, April 16th, Jos•
apb WesleyMcBrieo, aged 32 years. The
funeral witake place from the residence
of Joseph Mitchell, Dundas Street, west,
on Tuesday, the lath instant, at one O'cleck
p. m., to place of interment, Salem burial
ground.
4444—
•
Highland Creek. ...
The back roads are in a most deplorable
condition.
It's a dandy !! Mr. Cowan's new portico
and verandah.
Gardening 14 quite & fashionable pas
lime these warm days.
Claude `Sanders is mmying into a more
aristocratic neighborhood. -
The plane for the new manse are on ex-
hibition at Squire Elliot's. -
Tommy Maxwell is erecting s, new fence
around Wm. Tredway's property on tiie
west bill.
The old school bons. bait taken a rise,
and is greatly improved by the flew stone
foundation.
Although somewhat tardy the council
have at last started to gravel the east hill
and Helli well's hollow.
The 'spirits of the farmer have been
greatly cheered by the improved prospects
for a fair crop of fall wheat.
The oldest inhabitant cannot remember
a spring as late as the present. There will
be no seeding done on the heavier lands for
another week or ten days..
Mr. Lake is getting out his sale bile.
Pickering farmers especially should see
that the genial old gent gets a good send
off. Of course we do not =pot them to
shed tears at the loss of the toll gate. The
fifteen hundred dollar$ they will receive
from York county should act as a solace
and keep them from unduly fretting over
this dire disaster.
Green River.
Fred Wilson, of Manitoba, is at present
with bis parents here.
W. J. Turner is not improving as rapid-:
ly as his friends would like.
Mr and Mrs. Geo, Ferrier spent Satur-
day and Sunday in Markham.
Robert Defoe has got nicely settled in
his new home on Main street.
tin. Elias Bice and Miss Annie Doten
visited with Mrs. T. Ellis Wednesday.
D. *cover, wife and -family, took dinner
with Mr. and Mrs. P.R., Hoover, Sunday.
• The Rev. J. I. Mat,thorn, of McMaster
University, visited at O. P. Ferrier's Mon-
day. •
Our meeone, paper hangers, painters and
carpenters are at work in and around the
village.
Mr. Flumerfelt, superintendant of the
Whitevale Sunday school Welted our
sebool on Sunday.
Our public schoolteacher, 11. M. Flom.
"dolt, is patting in overtime now hustling
up the entrance clave. 110 is getting them
in pretty good shape.
Mine Mary /potent.who has been ill for
some time` hap bad o, relapse, =bill her
heart seems to be
condition rather prions: Disease of the
the trouble.
rand R. Data• tore bay
r. ;sparred and Thomas
up an addition tc the•
Y purchased by him.
eek A Hoover met with
rnt'gbt have proved very
and several others, with
taking. ice floes and as
high ahuge floe came
sway itpl against lbs
eg dem, jaln ng Mr.
t timbers. Rad
s. s.v era baud the
Sag:. _.
aiitbn.s3'pntti
farm residence la
One night bust
ser
`a iaccident wbioh
oaa. While b
lantern.. - were -
the mutter wab.r
or
East Toronto.
444.4.441444
The Ralwaqrai m;
and East T' not Little York
Toronto on Tuesday evening gave
a benefit concert to Bro. J. Carroll in Bost- '
o 's Hall. The concert was followed by a I
d nee, for I'whish a large number of tickets
•
h d previously been sold.
dward Carling of Prospect House, East
T ronto, was on Saturday married to Caro-
line Kiely of Toronto. The marriage took
place at St. Patrick's Church, where -the
ceremony was performed by
Croil, Mies Estella \l •tybee acted as brides ry
maid and 'Edward Phelan supported the -•.
groom.
Balsam.
A.Ellis a busy selling spray.pnmpa.
thM d. Se'vos called on her friends ere •
Mr. Bolter returned frtirn\ Toronto
Saturday. orf
Our path masfets would do well to •.k
after the dangerous holes in the roads.
Messrs. J. I Davidson ,t Sons, sec red;
several prizes at the Torouto Horse Sh.ar,i • -
Messrs. W. Balidon, J. Jones, U. J•aes
and J..II• ,Madill were in the city 8a -
dar on ar,
y•
t1. H. Mitdill has purchased a new C.
cent bicyclle, and is anxiously waiting
the roads o dry up.
entenni1
a Corners.
Mre. A1jbert Collins, of Eastoront
visaing oar neighborhood. 1 -
Mise H !da Pratt, left on Saturday for
fpr horne�in Cobonrg, after a fortnig is -
pleasant visit at Mr; Pratt's. -
Miss Etilrna Yates. of Toronto, is_h •'me
on a short visit. We trust that the f sh
air and sunshine may ;cave the hope. for
result of restoring her health.
Frild Hines is on the sick list.' He ad
a.se1y severe attack of inflammation, but -
is now on the road to recovery. oto
Corson iterelieving him at the station.
Richer `d Collins is confined to bed • i li
a threats ed attack of the dreaded ap I :n -
divan'. At ons time his, condition las
very serious, but the danger point has,
now been passed.
Mrs. Medd, with her two'oone, wh.I
present are living in Toronto. Dame ons.
for the w' k end. We were informed by
her that lie intends to return to Port
Union injtime to prepare her house for
summer boarders. She is going into the
tourist fastness quite extensively this
season. i
•
es -
for
• ,.
GREENWOOD.
F. l;, teen was in the city on Satin ay.
A few of our farmers have begun so ing.
Birth --"The wife of Thos. Sanderson f a
darighterli
Nelson' Lidgett spent Sunday with fri-
ends in Claremont. -
Many f rom here attended the Conse va-
tive Club"a Concert at Brooklin,,
Miss Grace Cammack, of Au ley, s ant
Sunday wigs her cousin Ethel Stewart.
Mise Lizzie McKay is spending a ectr -
days wit friends in Toronto and Oaky Ile.
Mrs. oeeph Harrison, of 'Toronto, is
visiting t ith Mr, and Mrs Samuel Stewkrt
Edwar McGrady, of Toronto, spent - R.
few days with his parents, Mr. and him
Robert I1 cBrady.
Miss N llie Emerson is residing with her
'aunt, Mr " J. Burk, of Brougham, and eche
•
intends ing to school there. I
Miss L n Gibson took charge of the
ague he on Tuesday. The topic was -
"
as`" The Et' rnal Morning and Modern Miss
-
"Theane.
The da a of the concert to be given by
the Ladies of the Church of England here,, -
bas been eheuged from April 25th to Msy
!lith.
•
F. L. reen had a small washout in hie •
dam agar , co-.seeuently only run the mill -
a day or ;' but be has it repaired again
and the mill ruuning full blast day a
night.
is
- .�•—+..
IROUGHAJM.
J, M. G w visited Toronto od Friday.
T. 9. rown was home from Toronto
over Bun T.
Mise 'becca Linton is home from Tor
onto vleit ;god.
-'
Mise Ei. Bell, of Toronto, is home vis-
iting for a; while.
brise (,t�akwell; of Markham, visitel
her brother os Sunday.
- Mre. MgGregor, of Toronto, is visiting
her daughter, Mrs, R. Phillip.
ltlrs. P.iamond, of Claremont, visited
under the parentalroof on Sunday.
Miss N. Alger, we are sorry to say, is ill.
Somewhat better at time of writing.
Mrs, Jatnes Beattie's daughter, from
Brantford,is visiting with her for a few
•
The yterian Sabbath school started
on
naveSundaPrey , afternoon with • an attendanoe
of t31.
Special a�ttenti'!n is directed to the advt::,
of Geo. Phillip, agent for the beet wheel on .
the road, the Cleveland.
Business I.must beer cepiteto k !
Boded as ie hasplarge
boots and sloes• Call and see them.
The Brougham football club organized
on Friday electing the following offioen:—
.,; John Drydei; yice.•pres , Jno
:Peorez,wt.,1,BHiteuo;rnkt
on res, W J Oioakwell; hon
ce-prey, Dr U 4 Bateson; oapt, E BodelI;
, tress, J L Cowie; moo coin.,
Hugh Stevenson,' Robert Cowan, Mesal
Linton," Charlie Stagg, Oscar White; Kim.
8 Gerow. Practice nights Tuesday and
Saturday. Alt challenges send to the
secretary.
A ie�y.:itnfortanate 0ircnmetanee accent.
ed on Wednesday? April. 5th, at Indian
Head is the,iburning of the restdenoe of
Harvey son of Obadiah Fleury.
The man7, friends of John Yake. 8h. ilia
oldest /iv" resident of • Stouffville,
ll be e to learn he bas bean. fo
thewitforweek seriouslythat ill. Orr! aeeonntr
of Its advan d age, E8, hie life it despair
ed .of.—Seater. eZ.
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.-:-,-.A , . . r am that. your crimes OILRY638 I . ._:1 - ..,
-T - - ! . -ibde; imidst the ozoitem t of ev4Ty lii� - v-, fL_ -, blackl Suppose I apprehanAOn. I ,._,_� - �:. - - ,. 11.
� . . . are they were texx vague . '_ 7.,-. ,_�_ *
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I . � Z 0 k, T-ALMAGE tAAX'S �Aft with the feeling that he is ready to .
7 "t, ; I . patrit rohal th -fl r; ami at this Samson cannot ayl is there for- lifd. "The wayo" says KOMPis- "td' ' _' :'L'._-`� I
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� . ". - . .- . IMPORTANT TEXT. Lbe -%hits faces of =:ngn a harlb's al �hat this -Conq eror cannot takaV them that 81�1 eptering . n tho patk �. t,,�",: , .
., � . I . 11 _. ive, and you "I have it 11foo theim. that . ��
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L., �:_ - " � . � Lhe flying chariots of the 'old 9 cannot pardon! , . . are advancing I"; it; the life, . . � .
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::�_. A . Out Into the Deso lo-rew Cbrip,- . � ., I ., . - . �
�. . AW � 'who Jesus is, Lad ke these ten years. It is high time that . .L. , . , � , .
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� � 11. - a fl4ft ACIR Get More Than Aftk1 a Charl6magne's that are V �� I . ., I..
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., . . . -9 Deel! it 1,f �very Bible lily, of wary "av, M, You outgrow it. Throw it aside . with boat was overpowered by the three 7. It - ye . bad i kno ms. .* JaA --:,:.! � '.-�.-.,..`.--1-'� I
� � 1 -.2%61 oft of Gears Word In ftand- zed bri ,in your old ledgers,' and your old 1hats, armies of the Saracens In the the in L, .
IP 111. ..' I , - qf �v, iry star, of every cra assure in 1which men apprehend 1 . '_ ' .
.� . - .. I -�hrow Teur'Llne Out Into Ski your old.shoes. Take a review of v, ".. ". ": ..."
I,- _... . dur �d of every blind n gan come to and . I . '.. �L :. �.
- . i Pass ' of Ronceavallest, his War- .Christ they ajVrIehand God. He who, _� I , I
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- I, I - or,#-16aunch . eat Into the Grea Coil in a f, is , of your present � P, � !;' . . ..
. ..- �_, . : auniii bt, of every . your present wants, r0r, Roland. in ,terrible.- barn- sees in Christ oialY an ordinary, falle. .. � �; ..
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�. . . __. , I 1P ;or God's Merey-Reco Clear *9 ths moitho of every Joaf tha'6 got to sins, and of youx present blessings. e8tnesa, seized a - - trumpet, and ible man utterli fails to find God. He,, 'e � _�, - :1
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� I . . em . fiv, o loaves, of every wratlif al. a Witt a sharp blade out away from ..J I ,!- . I
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". - - - .1 . '* I 808: pad ovary PUW4MS iLrm st,re - your paint half-and-half Christian life, mearne4nesis, saigej a trumphet, and sohafity is � i - -l' . ...
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.... - . .- th In gratuia it of w and with new determination, and now . a of the Fil I ,.- - . I .,
. - ii-It v. Dr. Talmage preached from the- ad ; blew it with such terriflo .strength that the Son to a knowledg aVr - ,�. . 1..
__ , Mo , of Augustlnt!Q� ni& and new expectations, launch th- 'army rA*Ied back with also. i Known MY F . . _ . I
.000-- -_ - 1. s orod, of is pla 0 opposing at-her. "God in I . ��:-.- .� .
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�foll wink text: " Launch out into the Sy, mi ol out into the deep. .1. __.. I
I ikician wuman, of the da terror; but at. the third blast of the Christ became manlike, that he might �. �., . --- '' __ - i
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dee Luke v. 4. .... , _ � i_ . . that io up from the th-sleep; Df The text is appropriate to a] I who trumpet it broke in two. , I me your libow man how to become godlike. - .. �. 01._ - .. 1.
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..o . , C ist�, starting " mp'algh of Joe , who had him bu i ad; of the are engaged in Christian work. The heumfolfth. . Not. '. ;-e . o_ . .: �1, _. ., �
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.": . . Oxi. the ca- soul fiercely assailed by all the powers Whedon. FiOmi - '. -
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a L n I pos.tad as sentinel at his too, - . , -, -
.. : a., fishing &long of earth and hall, ' fr �: - � I
. .. . .the OXId's conquest waa'selecting his 0 dumb earth, that ;book, . af A the shore. We set our- net in a good, I put .the miirbtor meaning " OM I that, moment," but',�.. A-_ � '.. : I .
I .. . . trumpet of the Goopet to my lips, ind after Christ shall haveb can glorified, . . - . I
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. . . 18L officers. There were plenty of and in -sight of a fine _ , . I
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k� - , and thundered w ien he die I. calm place. blow It three times, "Blast the first- which is the 00int of view in his - ..".
- ., , i�stu nts' with high foreheads, and . .onary in-Fran(e offered a chapel, Lad we go down every Sunday _. - �- '- . �
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: .- .. 1. . hi IS da, -a4d intellectual faces and Bit re in an humble dw Iling. I 8 to ses if the' fish have been wise the stoond-"Beek ye the Lord while seen him. it was only after the do- � "- * ' : _� ; . ..
;. ": . W an - Ma 1. k it, tore out a i ozen Page �, enough to come into our pet. 6 ...,.. -1 1.. - .
� . L ref i ad tastes, I ' 1. We he may yet and then only by-�.. .I... .
- , I in -Jer- . be found.o' Blast the parture of Jesus, . I . -
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: *:-" . T n Rome and , i th them might learn something from that boy third-"Now is the accepted time; now slow degrees, that they realized that - -` - .
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�- �-.�.; - last do he takes a groua,,e(f.Men who fa I had just lost tW[. son in �t Rolaod, - break in two., As it was hand- some of his own! Imperfect apprehen- '. .- � I
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�__.,_ r Cri ' .wa;, and his Bi ad bee no f i4b. He goes up by the mill-daM, ad dwn to us'from the lips 'of our , aion of what. he had heard of the spirit-' _, : ,.�!� .... I
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!": I had ver nude a apepch, never taken sea . ck home. The i ion and stands behind the bank, wheretb� fathers., 'We hand it d' are of Ood. See John 4, 24. - - ' . % '. .' `
.. :. . . ary too own to the lips ual - nat. . I z, -
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;...-.-, �. a I fi�ah oa,a not sca him, and he has hard- I I . I
� I'!, . a, in belles-lettres,�-never been it and saw that it was . otpur children and tell them to sound Show us the Father, -and. it sufficeth ;':: ". ' ,; __ 1
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. ' ly droppod the book before the Cork it whon - ., . .:
I i . sick nough -to make them look delicate Bible that he had left in i we are dead, that all the us. He either d i ad some such vision -I�. . - - " . ' . �..
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r_ .. . -th i hands broad, clumsy and hard box anA from whieh the leaves ha 9008 under. The f ish come to him as generatiolas of [men may know that as thot of MOMW,Lon Mount Sinai and * �._�_ � . � 1-1
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.� fast as he can throw them ashore. In I . -;.,. � �.._.:: .,,
- 'L bee a torn., The dyi our God is a pardoning �lod_a sym- of Isaidah in the !�temcbplo,'or else his,*
I . .. ng soldier . . �
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. . .. . : . knuo led He chose fishermen, amon WX t, on on OnG Of tbA I"Lven of i 6thw words, in our .Christian work, Pathetic dod-'a loving God; and that prayer was in spirit, "Lead us to a :, I;- - � �...
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.;-. G�t h r;;S� ec Bil 14 . ,"Rejected and scoffed at,, bu why do we not go where the fish &"I more to him than the anthems of nAearer and clearer knowledge Of him . '.' "
% I.;"! � fin Ll ly believed- in and ved-90 o catch souls in
. were physically hardy. Rowing. makes Th It is not 90 easy t . heaven. more to him than the throne to whom thou bast taught t.s. tu' pray; -,.- - ". '_ "
1, . ' Bit I May be used,to ligh tb 0 . -1, . ..''.
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:,..'. . �,e pi obuxoh, for they know that we are �' "-`:�_ I -
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� (013 which he sits, more to him than and so Satisfy the desire of Oar 1. ..
I .- stro arms and stout chatits. M h . i ...... - �
�. ' trying to take them. If You O" , .% _. "., .. .1, �,.,
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I . - � wit t ciam by some, but ws t throw are the temples Of Celestial worship, soula." I . '.._ -1 . �_. I -
.. �:.: � clim Ins of ratlinas makes one's head at&! in lif-., a pillow in d th, an o your line out into the world where I ; . .4� .:, ,�_ .
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!�-_ . . ey will the JOY of seeing the wanderer put, 9. See John 1. i8 ; 12. 45. � So'long � . :.1 .1- I _:
- they are not expecting you, th - .. I
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, -1, , 13tea - A Galilee tempest wrestled joy or eternity.' ing his hand on tho'door-la.tch of his time. Three yearS. 1�1 close intillaacy. - � . �
..;�:, '. �, his Bib A be captured. is it fair to take men ,; �.-
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. . _�:r men to gymnasts. The opening,*ork N r Ik all up and down t father-is house. Hear it, all ye national Seen me. - . seen the Father. The _ . -
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- -.1- of Church was rough 'work. Christ Mi] i I. Try every path. 1plutige in a by such stratageml YO& uis into Bread for the worst hunger. Medicine highest revelation of God-which this ' � - .- _'. I . I
.. _ ' like to eboat five thousubd 00 .1 -
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. I L * the prophecies, mid Con* out at th for the worst sioknow. Light for the world has 'ever received in . that Of -, - . , . " .. I
. _.- - �_ did A want twsive invalids ha the kingdom. Our Taborna,ole Free _: I., ���._' �.
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.. Aging epis �t I ea. Go with the ' triarchs u thickest darkness. Harbour from the Jeffils the Christ. , -, .. .
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I - ,. ists. � in College, within one .year, will be , .1 ,:, il.,. -�
. . - - �._�. about himi complaining all tlx�s time til. ],on most the 0= r .. 10. I am in th� FatUar*, alldl the :-..: _', .
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4. and ransack, as children who are . -
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. t tisfied whow they dome to a now ` I .
. - ; r hpw adly they felt. He leaves the -ma doing the wark of Many chwmbe& Dr. Prime, In hiii book of - wonderful Father in me. Thiess two sta.tediento'
�: . .. no The students oat their : not last . � . �
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- delica a students at Jerusalem. and Interest. entitled "Around the World," it is (lifficult to separate and analyze . : .� � _. ; .-
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- , until they know what, is in night on the back streets. 4 describes a tcanb in India' of marvel- &Part from each 'Other. Christ spoke . . I I -
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Rome for their-mothers and aunts to ever roomIs and into what .'every it every Dight thi& weela in many dea- - ' - ;.I..
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. - .'- ... take ax6 4 jand goes down to the doc opens. Open ever -casket. titabe places; sad soon we shall have a . .,� I ..-:.' . -1
- . lous architecture. Twenty tho ind and acted as God wo Id speak and act - -'_ .
I- :1. 11 _T jewel procliming man were twenty4wo thousand years in human nature; foxi Coxist was God '': ,fl � :.1 I
. �.. � .. I. mea-is re,'and out of the toughest ma- Exi no the sky-lights I . Forever be hundred lay preacherso, in erecting* that and t . he buildings manifest in the flesh, and God is- I- - . . , I : . ". .:�..
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. - .� I . tarial makes an apostleshi ; p. The min- 0='. week by �1-_ ''
. ask questi Pui to a 4igbffir the Gospel d b (lay, and -
. I ' sUY or four hundred around it. Standing in that tomb, Christ dwelling in glory. ' I speaknot . . 1 �. .
-. . . use than was intsndo� he 00ontal week, and a ' . - � :,
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. - . istry ad more corporeal vigour than pro rb: "Hold al 4 __� rts qt thy Christians prepared for other styles of it You speak or sing, after you have Qf myself. Revise'd Version, "not from. �. . I �� J_;� �
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__ Ceased You hear the echo coming from mybelf;" that is, otriginating in the' 11 I.- I.. I �,
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.. .. any 0 her class. Figs minds andgood mn=ui I le extendod when saven � rain- Christian work. if a man does not . . . -,:. . .
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�_. - . . height ot one hundred -and fifty feet. human mind. .
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:'.., .:: . ing ;old." pprociate that work, he is stuPid be- a - I. �.'. . :1,
- �, r �� . intent ons:� are important, but there ' a It in not like other schoes. The 8oun& 11. p3olisve Me. alsaw hara addremas ' ,-- ., -
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. ` I's ising from Bonn o Cobl tx on yond all -arousal. ' . $ I . _
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Inhust Physical force to back them. t ' out in sweet prolongaitiOM6 not only Philip, but all the disciples;: ,_ �
. . he ' thine, the,sconery coM ativo,- The whole policy of the r. - _. .. I..
. � . I The ii�tellectual mill-wh'e�el may be ly iA me. But fr�ffn entz t May- God is to be changed. Insroad of as though the angels of God -were in the Greek " Believe me, yo." -.1. .� � �.. - -1 I I , " �_.
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.1� . chantin on I he . 12. Greater works than these shall - -
.1 .1 ailt and the grist good, ,but one, 3 it i's encha - king after the few who have 9 � _.. I - _1
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I . - doe i, and feel - last f ash of I bo(,L)mo chri-stians, otle chief efforts How many� re to-da,y, in the he do. The spiritual in' greater, than. � _ lL;_ � - ; 1� .
ther6 must be enough� blood in the ntLn% tomb of al.n. will Ii t up the voice of Cho Physical. Jesus had ma . - 11 I
11 : Wei I . 1 5: a if t� if, af ter a sou I al do storms. _ - ,
. . . . , i boa i ty must i xhaust be scene; but I will be for those outside. .now they , disease, I ' 1-,1..:1_-�L1,
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. .. :,:.:, uiill-r !"a. to tdrb. the 4ne and grind in I Moment th,are in ..a turn I of the man is converted, he cannot take care Penitence and pre art If ' vegetation and death obey him " ' L i.:. I " .::. .
� I_ ould cry unto G the echo would by.saying to each,, "Do this," and it - _L: �-,,_ ,
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. ; .. the 'Pt. ior. I! . I I ri , which oovei,s up he formor view of himself, I am not going to take care 0 _ - .' 1 * I
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I . _. .- I --fiih.- .en 11 ill"'." be-d'�L"Li Wi ' i drop f rom a struck from the did it. Its followers, by saying in th� Ir � �:.,';�' �
He chose armi , I ' ause m)m luxuriant vineyards, and of hira. If he thinks that I am goillo 'r-
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� �,-. � _ I ' Marble cupoita ofl! n earthly mauso- hearts, -in the' name of Jesus of -_�-_�!
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� . MO i defiant castles, a d bolder bluff&; to stand and pat him on the back, and -i 'i L".
L * � , h d knocks. The - do this," have wrought .. : _ I
- �` . T -wr back f rom the Nazareth, -
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- I.. thed,.' and leum. but soundi g a . i 4
.. - . Ift rapes so rips feed him Ouq of agb elegant spoon, and I [ L
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1: , - __ main whoi,cannot staul assault is not, _t if the hills be touch6di they watch him so that he does not got into warm heart of ang Is, flying with the greater changew in. the world of 8pir- -- ' I - � I -, * � -
� i the few miracles wrought .-.:z J, ;
-.,. " fit for the ministry. Jit has always w-61 L d bleed tbt ric, life aw4y -into .4 draught , of worldliness, he is MuCh news; for thers , among the angels its. Even , - . . .
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- �Ll baer_ and *always will �e rough work; the bowls of " a d Hockbeim6r. mistaken. We have in our churches of God over Ono 1 i ekr that repentathl by the a�ostles in Christ's name af- �. .. . ' - . L?. -
- '..,.�'L.. 1. I Hers and there, there are atro4ma of a great me ofi helpless., insane pro- ___ -6 __ i - ter his ascension, and by the powev , . .� s .L :L ... .
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I ; : i.il and tb:a* man, wh,o at e�ery censure or wa A r molting - into the riverlo like fossors, who are doing nothing for . of his ROIySpIrit, w as Dr. Chul% 1 , .:- . �,
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1 ' caricature, sit& down to cry, had.bet- sm- I ' a gwallo SUND Y - SCHOOLI ton reminds - us, gr r In.. their ef. - , , �. �_: "'!
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I L. . I or loy W I a the '6wom themselves or for -others, who wauLun .! � - ' % - 1 . , �
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2 : '' L grea . . ill
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_. of t gladness. d whe . They are so �11. .. d facts, thad any wr6 ht by -Christ, I _;.,_1:.1'.:.,. !l
. _,:1_ . ter be at �som� other 1work. It is no � night to atop and nurse thaml - . I I . ... I .
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I . .: . I to throw rits* bi k tl over troubled with doubt an to what her th I L.. I-. !- � . was seen .by the apid extension ;�..:;��,- ,
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. - :. � Place for ecclosiastica to - TEkMATIONAL - ESSO-No, APRiL 16* , ..'_ �
. . � � doll-babies. A c �y
:: der-ot the hi Is, and you are are Christians or noL The doubt is IN the Chu"h and the victorious faith - ':,� . .
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,.-.. q,mnot.preach because be has ehing disenmAibaa tion at 'May- settled. - Theloars, not Christians. The 4111� . Of saints "d martyrs. Ev yearthe :, . .:
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-.-� I to _ _ _ %'1L . I_ - - � . .
- 1. forgotten his manuac�ipt, or lost his P a the lLghts along he ahore faLirly beat we can with theas fish in . Church's �history V�itnosses conversionA * _.,� -- .1
.... I . � - "JOSM She Way'aud I 4v 11-rom 1b wad The Liffie.; Mo . -
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.. itch the soons wit their beauty, throw them back Into t-bq streaiia4 and joba I,L I.g,L re wonderful than 'the raising Of _,,__ .
::I- . spectac lea, ought not o preach at all. Cok en Text. JfAh "a 14. IL La I � , :,: ..'�.!, �. - � I
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� I_, � giving one a thrill t t he fee a but go after thew again wIth5 - zarus. Because :Igo unto my Fa- - . I -
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. . ,: .:.: HaaV011 deliver the Church from a min- 11 . :, ., ,! I PRACTICi .L NOTES. I ther -z:.:-. _.. ; - ,
. .:%,..'�_�`f . 011(s, Yet that lasts bi tow a r. 'So .1 . _ ''1;.:7, . _ �rl 1- 1� Temporary ,separation Is th� , . �
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;:r .. istry that preach in kid gloves, and thi i river of God's ord is A Ir � % _. - .':L !' THE GOSPEL NET - . ... - . I . ises - , .
. . . , ___ - . . , i 'be " � : :_ �
� � � ... ... , .Varna, 1. Let at you r . dition on which, al.1 these prom' 2.
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- froan sermons in trtight streajin, but "C the. world and preach he t hang' .� ;�
- -black, Morocco covers. a a winding splen- ro into all - _- `.,�'_ I
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�,!. dot , at every turn n w wonder& trovAble4. 0"Agit,ait ." No M67 '14. W . 1.:.. . � - ..
1. -.-`-) -These �i'hermen were rough-and ready. to the G(Apel," says Christ; into the fac- ever 13, batsoavhr ye shall rask is ' ' 2'.
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. � -1. att'aCt, still riper vintage preas�ng to tory, t h-s enginoi-bouse. the club-room, had more reaison o be igitated than My n6m6- - Nbt meNvQy by adding thi ' "
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. 11-; - . .een in the: severest. of all I I � "
�. the "brink, and ezxyw led L With CaS_ ula, "For Cbrist' �, I
. LOW we houses of the sick, into the the slave tbrim : ::: -
'� 'L A to wh these words were !a sake," to oui _ : 1- -.- I � �
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1. -1 colleg Wheff they were knocked Itles, of Strength, ,'tolzonfel and dark lane, into the damp dollar. into prayers, tiout by belijovingin his inferita 7 - . . ;
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. . .. over by - the main bo�m of the ship, Julanuisberger haa not ing compared the c0ld garret, 0o the dismal prison., spoken. They. bu I just - bea.rd that -slftd trusting to his i� , love. That will I " � I �". �. . ..,- 1. ;,
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I . ` , they entered the " Sophomore;" when with the strong tower &u which'the Lot every man, woman and child in th4pir master weA �o leave them, af ter do. To this pr<=Agio no oinditions are . , -: . 1.
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I rigitecias. run aad are, led, az d 'our rookI3 w York, and London know I on wiplis h betrayed him and hers all)POnded in word, but the whol - ,� . ..'r. ;
I . washed off by a great wave, they an- disiaiib&rkation at lam gate of . t .1
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. in the even- hat Jp?ias died, and that the I" disnourme iniplim the great conditior. ... "'.. � .� � IL
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� another had deal d him.. ,All their -that figurl6d in the . "!.. � ! :-...-
. taxed the, "Junior;" when floating iag, amidst the light that gloaam liven is Wide, OP"n. With',the Bible ins and the , , I , _ .
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. r book i n4 ambitions and p a for the future had brane,has of Lesson V,I. v , .. 1.
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- 10, tw iaYs, without 11 food -of -drink, froin the shore of heav . The trou- ona p,ocket. and the hymn- If we dwell ill ._1 ` ....., I -
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.i. is . � I -our wills will be lost 1._..� ',�...!.
_,� . ble, that the vast ma ity of Bible nother 1ximcket, and &loaf of broad been ruined, by' am abrupt revels, !i;W and " In us, . : ..
. '. :;; on a nkthey came %.o the "Senior;" . . � . I � - ., . �
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. .' voy 11 90178 stop at � Cobol at 2, � nder xgur arm-launch Out into the tiolm I 2, -I.- ,:1 __�!.... v.�.,.. , - .
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I "I , and, w an, at last, their.ship dashed routdoOpOt LbiA woild's wretched-I it the bt miah were to go 1:11 hU; 'w" will still have; our prefer- '. .1� - --�- - i , .
, ;. _...- HE CHI F GLORIES . ances and longings, but with our wbolf -'_�,� ,
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. �, on the eac�'in a midnight hurricane, I . a%vaY,tvhat about be Messianic king- natures we will Hook first the king-. -,�" `:-
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.."'. they g aduated with t �a firs; honor. 11 - , � [_'S'.�._,L I ' The text in appropriate to all the domf ,What Woul, i become of - him doW of God aad his righteous ; and - :.; - , .,-.
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- ' T sea of God's wo �d Is �6 ,lie f - Every sinner in this whokn they me greatly loved$ Wha.t In such case we have but tonaes"k and :.. . .� _ 11 �,
I,— :I .but a orgLven. come to God if Ike thought _ � .:...
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- My xt finds Jesus on shipboard Ge - ret twelve miles by six Ouse would -. �'', I., - I
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: ....� who receive. Anything in my name. All . .. . 1, _: �
:_�m . , with o of those bronzad men,�-:Simon bou dlem;. and in any one. direction . poo_ about, their own ft, turof 'But he - .1 . :. . . ' , .
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.. t at he might, just cotnei as he. is classes of prayers are inellided', for .,' ' 1w.;., I
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I !, . I , by nA - This fisherman had been Y 4D aai� on for ever. Why, then, p a talk an though the.pardon'of God .foretells the disant, kr proo"ds to give benAvrel no lam than for. spiritual [ I
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. . paweepi his not in shoal water. "Push 00 , ne Yourself to a short psa,4m, or ore a narrow river, like the Kenna- the great r6asob why neither-they 'ct& This puts 'no . - �._, , . . ,. . 1 .
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- . . out , 11 Christ. " what is the 'Use to few - verses of an istle I The or the, Theme&, and that their sin 6bristiftn's I whimts, but It does most - . . -�:. ''. -
of, huglyin"g, this shore'l im this boat I la.r i� fisb are not r Christians Whose hopes _.- ., J __
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I &I r the shore. d we too much water. to ,enter it. � flolownly declare that under-the Con- .;.."--. , �: * - �
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Hore is Is lake twelve Miles long and H * I Sail to the Wi a of heaven. ; it In not a river. nor a bay. but a are daabod and wh(oe,-Iivea are appar- ditiong above described every need _ ., -1 � :.-%'. �
I I . six wlde�_and it is all populated-just Ta ( hold of both oars, d pull away. a . I should like to persuade you to ently blasted ishoild be agitated. .or our mature, put intoo prayer, Will be ', , - ; .:;, - I - ...% k.
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,. waiting 11or the sweep of your not. Be 1 Ike some of the w era that go la aqb out into . the great deep Of troubled. Ye beliefs in* granted. We must remember, how.. :'�'!:_,�,-_ : , '. I . ' -
.1� . Launch but into the deep." I off I rom Now Bedford r Portsmouth, G 0 - God, believe I .,..,.. , td r I
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. a mercy. I alp p merchant I ever, that in our human short-might. '. ,.;. -: - ;, . -
The .&4�;Ce that my Lord gave to to' i gohe far two or th In the Greek both verbs .: ,.. ' , "
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i, years. Yea, h ve bought a cargo of spia" in &dIa. also In Mo-, I ednem we often ask for thilngs whi(,.h . ':. ' �� -
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.- 'n aPPZ a I stime, voyage. through abUI of exchange. R .. , �. z:�' ,
� Simo -opriatis for you and Cal ,i late on' lif re in the Impera,five; therefore the It we knew all, we should not wantw . :; .. -
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. . . for me. _�We are just do, ) I wan t Ito land an U you land in lia for thd whole Cargo. You area beat rendering iq. " 3olieve-in God, and Then our petitions are best answered % *� ',.-,
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.1 PADDLING ALONG tHE allbYlk. h v n. Sail awair Otto yo mariners, ah p-captain. I give you Ube orders, by being denied. A baby boy cries for.-:'. ..: - .. . .
. .1 I f believe in We."" M 56t, increasing dif- .. .Z 1-1 I .
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-*Itk � I or eternity I Launch out into the an i say: "'Bring me those spiceas." You a bright-colored liquid which he goes .... � .. '. � : , . , � : . - ., .- :
We are �fraid to venture out into the d I .. es, by a broo der fadth. , I 0. _. .
I lai d in India. - You go to the trader . � In a glass; what he wants, and hat - .;;,. -,..
. , 0# .
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great de�ps of God and Christian ex- h text Is kpPr9priate to all Chris- ani say: "Hart are the orders and 2. My'Father'n ,)us& .The .imy�l In he thin'ka he: is Crying for, is a deli- , � , ," �. ,
.� -
- - _?, _.: - perience. We think that the boat will tia of shallow experi Ace. Doubts t. V hi 1�. . I � . .; .1. �,_ . -
.1.11 - yo, find everything righ � On do full of meaning. ! His father is our OtOuR and stre,119thaning drink. But ,_�: . !, ,,:,- -
no sto I . :1 ."; -
Op t :. . . ': L:".,- ..
�' be upset, or that we can not." clew an ears have in our d y been a I most n . the contents of the glass are poison, �r - I -
'
t d to the t;,:. - �. �'
. ,:. down the mizzon top-sail,-, . Father. , The "liduse" includes the SO the mother in her jove disappoints , - ,.. : ,;J I .
.. ..:: and car el parliame t of Christian It not your business to pay it.- The I . I
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- --.- cowardice makes us poor fishermen. I gri �f t "Donbts aM ears are not atlangements were made Lefore you whole creation. whii)b in God's dwell- her Ran by putting it out of his reach,... ,;L . .*.
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�
� . think I li�ar the voice of Christ com- aig health, but f toris aM car- ,stit , 0 and then gives him a nourishing drink � .: . : _ � -
.. ... i a, an a ted. So, Christ purchases your ing place. Many �nmnsions. r . :_ �-
. manding, he did Simon, on that b c (%_ you. have & ' .. I . . � I -
. , _...
.
. I luable house pa on. h puts the papers, or the o, from another glass. :80 Christ treats _.�:L ' .- e:. I
- �. w; is ran . . , . '_ . �.:. i �
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. :!�- day w�enjbrlght Galilee set in among or aIrm, It is suggest- that the title p Lses, nto your hand. Is it wise to I -d i t slat�d In of this verse ,,:I';,- -'�.., � I ...
0 n hill
is 0 t uselse the ppomiss - . - . ..
.'-. , the gi, f Palestine, like wa- is ot good. roe 2& This life one abiding plaze; would be br(*eA. . , .
. ll. You emplo �Ounsel. You St and say, "I cannot pay fqr my To I .... �:, - I .. : ...
_: - ter flash ag in an emerald cup: Ila Ith deeds examin I .". . :;, ;
.. _. . You qaearch redomptionf" God does not ask you to the aternal life. which he was about , _....._1 "_ . ., .
__ ,
'. . ' . 41111108 - - 1. - - - m 1, . -,, � �W,-, F: ..
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A, . ts. on what hais been done. to prepars. iff . , _� 1. - . -
"Launch ut into the deop." , . t4 ecard for mortgas judgdion �nirther.. If it were not - - ' I _. -1 I ` .. ..,. I
. �. .1 This div ne counsel comes, first, to _ a ' P I 171ltF! WASTED IN LACING, SH - F,S. .- 1. .- I
.. iem Yb�i are not tiafied 1 until 121LUtutt lknngto the deop� I . �- . .1 . .. -
. I �
. - all those � 0 . . so, I wou14 hays tpdd you. It in not . . - � �. _;-1:, I
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-
I . : I , . are paddling in the Y have�a certificate, gnad by the to Join handa, . , - An -English Mi)l Owner 'not long ago I .. I ".11 I �i� . . 1Z._ .- , , I..
I .L . . margin of Bible research. 'My father gr � . . I . � *�. 11
. .. . ths.es Of,the Stat 436theible Promiess make Will Com-L in me to deceive you with vain hope; ' � .. I .
.
- a t� :ssuring you oircle th , .1 _ -L .. r.- ;. _"_� I .
� read the ible through three times th t tie CH gAXW.; t how: Many . all your tampts- what I promise, I will surely Perform. issued the order that the girls in hio. �_ �'. 1�1_-,; ., . _. . -
I PH all a : .- ;:, .. 1: ' ..
,
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__ after he � employ abould not wear laced shoea. _ .. . ._
� - � a eighty years .!of age, I i theit title to -he I an andecid- tio , any7al'"Y'Otra rrows. Tho round I go to prepare - a plwm for, you. (Bee ..- .- '..: .
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.1 .11 and witho t spectacles; not for the ad tterl Why do, on not go to tat) of Ki Arth and his knights The reason g one'f - , �. I . ; . .
*
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. Mre pur of saying he had been t , soordas and find Hob. 4. 14; 6, 20.) , ; . . _1 . .
. ... _: � � -..: I_: ,.'- 1
2 , I Give your- had iroom. f only t irteen banqueters, � I I � I ;_ I - L, boot bftama untied at least five timea. _ .. * '' *,.. �' :*:j,
I Z f OU OLO� 1. I
.1. . ,
I I t U L - rec -I . . .
see f rest, day nor ni again, and a ve . I
through it so often, flout for his sterp- 12i h u d tat I of God's supply in & I will come' , . . ... I
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I . I I , I �w_ '' a I ,profi.t. go re 'YOUX title ol r to Ins nisions lar ac for In I the present in- you. (Bob. 9, 28; 1 Them. 4, 14-17.) a da . .. , . -
John ColbY, the brother-in- ca ad $I Y, and took at is"t five- Seconds,
. . . ' OU04 , . ,:;.- ,_ -
. , - in t4! -W '' . to ratio. When these twenty-fi esec. �.
..-: -1. �. I &w Of Da n Webster, learned to read A L:k bab an'to 64 earth Ad heaven Ao sit *. ,_,;,'
_ I _. t, . .. -
I � after he w ' i't% . 1�ayd. the .Saviour came -
:.: eighty-four years of age, I In many ,. . :::,. .
.:. .. _: ..:' i
�, h&rActOr IS to Come up to at, ad foi the sti I mfghtior popula- - ' * OndA were multiplied by 300-thevnura-... , � ; : _s_'. �
_. - 1 - -:
..,4 In order t t he might become ac- hi h again, - isad ia, comiag - - by the .I. .,:. . .:
I .. ,
- I �_� �� quainted .�r 8t Lad.arda. We have DOW to L tio that are yet to- nu ber of girls i4 his eMploy-7the loss of .1 , - �, �
I,- �. ,h
: ;' There h nigh our libra y to find one " Do not sail ooast-wisw alc a i 1� . - .
W tb'the Sefipturas. r( � I .
. n o .�_- Ong yourol resarro,otion; by the i or experiedo6of - 1, � I 1,
- . I.,
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I - I.- .1 1. i's no book a the world that demands R bi�rt M'Cheyne, or on Edward Pay- habi.s and old sins. ; Xxoep clear of the bellevees heart; by death; by the time Was, he said, too serious to sub. .. . - .. .. __ . � . I
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1. - I . . . i
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� - .Y., so much of our attention as the Bible. so : one Harlan The time the ihors. Go out w4e the, water and of the world, and we know not Mit to. Another mill owner, talking - .,--. ., .':L �_!� z�._ I
-
I" -_ et ninet Atha of Christian man iret he I find half a in do pent. Oh, for the 'd-soa of God's b how many - .. , . m. , 1�:.. .
I �� ; Y, will 00 a *I * I . ad b id he contea. Over this case, said' that he had for- :-I.r 1 , �
, (� A W . :. _. . . .- ., . . , ��.,
. ,
. f I "Be it known! unto you men % v as - .
1 . � - , t the same s"t T . ; he 3 Ye may be . . L
no ItUOM th A'apakle-deep. They think Of th Bitting it aXtt w7t� am' bidden visitors, . because each of his ,; � :,. �: _.. i7,-, �
� . .-_.,. - 1. '.
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1 - �' it is a * g sign not to venture too w tb Uums. Grace of _ ;�, ._,�'. �
-� I � �', f . -t4rough th . .. - .
I 11 _1 h can Make ari retbron, that, is Mai A The thought of. welling with, our Sa�-- " hands " turned her head to look at � . _ I I I..
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I
. -, ow or wh , and � at deal otter men than those I is pr %ched unto you the forgiveness 11 . - , - .
� �. . Th I Y a a � of iour ishould be Lhe reat hope field up them. Computing tw nty . -visitors a .. ,,�_ �.
.- :. � if the h on tj - -.- _�__
i .. I Y .Ree some - La the u ure life. day, And two,acconds- a - -
� . Christiana becoming v Mend ad. ChriAtian MOD seem Bias. I preach It with an much oon�-- before us . . forlhe head turn- ' : Z ... I
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_,� . , - � -
�� �;,_ Inquisitive about the deep things of a aid they wil 4. Whither I to a know, - and the ing." of eav,h of his ' �_.1:1.i.;, I
- I ' orodox by go- fide . to that eighiy-year-old transF*1 ON employes, . - _� �.% I �-
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I .: "I. : God, they Y: "Be ca�reful; you had il Iton far. Thetystdol'tt believe - In greas oor as to - this maiden. ! Though now. See the Revised Var- Made Over six hours daily wasted in:..-- - , .
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i - _� . _!1.1.. better not out so fogr from: shore.' C riptian . - perfebot!on. � - in no Your sins were. blood-rod tbby shall be sion here. Jesus li of ton spoken .- -_ -,. . I
I . _ .. . � I There to that gesture. I Statistics are ine:-zorable ; . - . I ,�
� I . . , -
i . __ ��h, : MY answer in: - The farther �r you go f n*er - of your aLng . I 0 to , the Father, t - :, ... . - . . . ,. I- I " , I I . ,_ i � I - - - - . . . .
I , , , rfect for some snow -whita. if he more raggod the them of his, retard hi aga. - - ,Z;- �- -, .
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�� _: from sihore the better, If you have i yet, I wIll.keeP atch and his bols life. had been " � _:_f _. 1, . .. I z ..- _1.� _. - P
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I .: - give proftal tbt -more oompasstionat the - John 7. 33; - �" �:M , ii=�_�_ _� I _7�_ . -: - I ��'..e :1. - , . - ,�. ,�-.,.. �-
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� the right ki of ship. If you have ;r( notice In time, if o 0 tructiug'man how to go. 'to ; 'i:� - - f -, _., , - -,.,- _..� :., - ..-. ".,
I . . . y�L - _ .
i - - - . 1; too spentin ins :1.. - A.. t.. , . :
I ear f . I _ , - � .
. , , .
�1 - . Wre- worldl philosophy for Y i too 111 father. -Do you say that yoia ar :� , �l- CA TRAVEL. - I � � .__,_ , - %.
I
. the hulk, IM ation, for the isafet . .. . the Father. ; . _1� . i�,k N,T--� � . . . - - ., i � .- 'I' ", 'y , -� . '11 � I .-14
- , '. . I . I . . . -. ", -, � �
_i : , . , you r theo- badf � . _. � , 7 . 4 I . __ ; . . ; _. ,.;:'. ".. � , � I ,
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. .,. -, �_11 - �_ ad pride a sail, and selt-conceit log Ono-half of you ristions are I— - 5. "rhomas saith.; . A disciple wh(� The Lord Chano �,��,.� - ;
:* �. ", &1u , .1 - ellor d f E n g I �' - A'd I 9L .:. - �', ��,�- .- � d � - �,. ! � , -
I- fba� the he] the-firat squall �011 do, si nion-vi.Am MARK �, - , , �--7 , � . I .-
. . �_, . uply stuck in t he Mu . Why not , , " � � .. . . - - .,.-.,. 1;�� -, I - �_'_
I � . , f � tood it impoissiblel to believe without never allowed, under any circum-,. � �,, - *.
:_.. ; .., . . I I—- I -
- ::..: _. istroy you.j ut it Y01i take tba Bible tjooft - from . - . _
I I .- - 01 ev!erml a
.. _-,-, , to yyth ng but Godl 4 6 'a p4rdoo -is higher i6i #11 clear avide4co.; and his desire to under. stances, fo make a journey which in-. , -,, � _�'..-i7�'�, :-.:'� .11
_ �.,., r your cra 1, t he. farther yoq. go t -.1i'L 11
� : - *�' . n I edifying. ; 1. .
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., � - * - - - __ . . ' - r sbort the' ' ,_� .,
I he G vii� not to him t�hat it titip, your t 'vtn�grsssion. , IfTlia blood Qf Stand -Is very We know not vOlvas a sea Voyage, howeve -_-
. I - fdO0,100-6410
11 bbtfobr; and afh*�r you have gone ton ad 0 up of ,100- Lo lot I Jesus Christ clea'A"th ,fr6m. all aln'" Whither. t.hca goost. None 6 the die-, 0
, tin, and - . I . . . 9 - I .1 . *,' ".
;I :j :�t � :.�, - - I _' . . PPosed, to have the '_-:1' 4,'o4!� - � � � "_ L ..- 1', .
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� � . tho4liLlotnd ft r'cwrs, Christ' ;4UI still " op y elwir u6tte ' to k ,Pfhg_. _�__ .�, ;. ! �'; . 11
. - . ..� ' ' - DO Y u, say " thit you art* to :4ardt otpits could yet have 1�n - y
, .
. . Lord fit tbzt-- - Who Pe le ar r*ho' - , .r- grsat-beal in his: immedia ee -, ,--- _Iq��'
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. . - �, 6onmand: I'Lljac.nch out into the deep." Id, and have nothing t may to G -eia ton tim�es'har4or." - Do Standing of tkaAbmblar. palfiloil ail . v., , k - - ''. � i . I
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od, Su' - . - 11ow 'day id 11i6i,"Under. all circumst iss -'4". �
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-.1. '�- . :� �-�- Ask sa* a-ch question as "Who is t e strew' their prayers with it r I .0. 11 anc - �... 1. .. . . 11
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ELEC' RICITY TO CUT STEEL EAMS
♦ rite . t iIxperialertt fa tilers N filch
saved Tame and Labor.
:. Dur a g the reconstruction `. lam' of
• floe b ' ilding recently in Chios ., ' an:in-
terest ' g use was made of the electric
burro t in cutting in two a 01 stet of
half a dozen heavy steel beamwhich
it waneoessary to remove. These
beams s were of the ordinary I. shape
and II teen inches Beep. % Owin to the
diffic Ity of getting at .tbt b.ems at,
the plces where they. were 'to be slit,.
specia saws would have requi ed h'ad
the b:: ms been cut in the t rdinary
way, and it was ,estimated the t the
work ould take two men about
twelve days' time and cost about
,100.
Inst ad of doing the work w th hank
saws, t method was adopted such as
scienti is burglars invented f r • get-
ting i a to safe and vault doors f steel.
A Curr nt of electricity was br ught in
,frons 'he electric lighting wir:s in the
street to do the work. The positive
termin 1 wire was attached o : the
steel f ame work of the build ngi to
which the beams were riveted, and the
negati e wire was attached to carbon
point , 1-2 inches in diameter which
wasodr ovided with a wooden h: ladle to
ena}fle the operator to direct t along
the be ms at the places whe a they
were o be, cut. An asbestos shield
protec ed the operator's body from the
heat aid black spectacles prote ted his
eyes. In twelve hours. the beams
were vered, with an expend ture of
only a 'out five -horse power in electric
Curren , and the work was don: by an
ordina y workman.
VACCINATION.:..
It is stated, in support of
tion, that in Austria, prior to
tion becoming general, out of
1,000,000, inhabitants 38,541 t.
smallpox within a period of 30
figure reduoed to one tenth,
8,745, in the corresponding t• �s
sr the general adoption of vacci
The man who 1 ves fah vain, lives
to no purpose, liv : to a bad purpose..
W. Nevins.
1..
pharaoh lax"
� ""'---� Ps'ae ranb1t, Quo
cigar Masutaourer.
144 Man iacallmiserable o far- as himsef
so-Stwnas ro.
• Lw' -�'- Pbr Ower Pitts Taira
MRs wIRmLow's SOOTHING STROP hiss
used by mothers for their obit ,ren teethlog, It Booth.
the AIM, soften the gums, allays all pain, ire win
bollo, and is the best remedy for diarrhea. Mo. e
tie. Sold by all drugglsts throughouttewrourlld.
rare and ask ter " Ma. Winslow roave Syrup." S"_
The' bo in lger'if outnttnibe
the human beings.
NOTICE--s'boir
Trage fes— Rims- full histot ry t U
murder and trial of Corde is View and San. Pars'o
These msiled ou receipt of 5o. Agents and .Bookstore
supplied at $1.60 per hundred. Leprobon • Lepruho
1I09 Notre Dame St., Montreal.
Throughout the world Nitre ITS 87
known voloanoea, 270 of whioh are a
five.
4 t • HOW'S This _ t,
We otter a Hundred Doltays lt•ward to
any ease et Catarrh that can not be cured b
Hall's Catarrh Cure. -
F.'J. ()HENRY & CC}., Props., Toledo 0.
We the undersigned, Il have known �', J
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe hi
perteotly honorable in all business transaction
and financially able to carry out any oblige
Uons made by their firm.
WWrraT&TRUAX.Wholekale D ugglsta.Toledo,0
WALDINO, KINNAN l� MARVI Wholesal
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. '
Hall's Catarrh Core is taken ternally, act
fug directly upon the blood Ind mucous aur
faces of the system. Prloe,75o. per bottle. Bel
by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall's Fatally Pills are the best.
;; In Russia no person is pernnitted t
marry after the 'age of eighty, an
only five marriages are permitted.
FRENCH DIVORCE LAWS..: _.
France has now a law by. which mere
riage may be dissolved without cost to
the Applicants. The Paris Divorce
Court devotes Thursdays to gratuitous
decrees. On one day recently 204
couples were divorced during a session
of four hours, an average of more than
one divorce a minute. The applicants
belonged to the working class, in
which divorces were infrequent' before
the passage of the law.
WE•C9th8`
25, 30, 40, 5o
11 CALVERT'S - -
t bolio Disinfectants. Soaps, &s t-
merit, Tooth Powders, etc., have been
awarded 100 medals and diplomas for superior .
excellenoe. Their regular use prove it infeoti-
,oua diseases. Ask your dealer to obtain a
supply. Lista mailed free on application.
F. O. CALYERT & CO., ,_
iMANONSSTaN. - - ENGLAND
29 OP OUR STUDENTS hare recently taken good
situations, and tour positionsremain untule1.
STRATFORD, ONT. We teach real business—no Ind.
lotion or nonsense. In fair oompetitfon our graduates
are nearly always chosen. 'Badness linen appreciate our
work. Best Commercial School In Canada. Bator now.
Circulars fate.
W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal.
2nd Number now in prem. Semi
in your subscriptions at once for
the year 1899 and receive 11101.
1
and 2. No. a contains J• colored
plates, giving the exact shads*
land reproducing the stitches its
that many studies. ' Send ase t•
We give this fine 4 -Blade
Pearl Handle KNIFE for
selling6 Ladies' Gold Plate
Shirt Waist BEAUTY
PINS at io cents each.
Simply send your address
and we will forward wicks
post-paid. When sold, send
the 6o cents, and we will send
knife, with all charges paid
Addretls,
Gem Novelty Co.,Torente, Ont.
aaTN. B. When replying to this ADVT, specially mention this paper, give the
name of paper and where you sawi
ENE
NIGHT'drurn Cure.
gg a tor it. P
k your Agents Beat se. ting article on the mar wanted
osteo a kat. Sells in every store. faad�--
tory and house. Exclusive territory.
ROWELL a RUBY _ Watteau and Montreal
HARTFORD.
TIRES
t i ;f rt f...
�1
Have You Ca~arrh 4 -;
then` get Catarrhozone, w
neither a wash, snuff nor of
but' odorous gas, which' is car
air directly to the diseased
penetrates wherever air can g
never fails to cure. Have you
symptoms of consumption? Th
Catarrhoaone. Outfit, $1.00.
bottle ' and inhaler, 10 cents.
sale by all, druggists. Manufa
'by N.. C. Polson & 1Jo., Kingsto
Send 10 cents for sample.
\ OMEN LETTER CARRI
en are employed as lett
n several districts -of Fr
two
tiers
which eaves Invalids and Children, and alp* Rears
pesshrll Infante wbeee Ailments and Debility have
00.4 all ether treatments. It digests wkw all
nod is rejected, area 60 times its cost *medicine.
50 Years' Invariabl Buooas, 1
Annual .'era of l`o lrl
mos. Ftattgen.y, Dy
indtgeatlon Consumption Hfa`eteg, Brasurltisy
sou, Clough; Asthma, Catarrh, Phleccnt IDlarrh
N.rvvoua Debility, 8lespleunses, Desp.nd.ney,
'Loudon, W., also le Pari., 14 Ru. de5. Osstisltoty,
all Orooers, Chemists,nd Stores everywhere,h
3. Id;, ea. bib.. 14s. Sent arriage free. lso
arry's Residents Biscuits, in tins Ss. td. wads.
Agents for Canada : Ther. EMen b
o., Limited, Tereaba
10 OUR! A COLO IN ONE DB
fake u.tive Bronco Qufuiu. Talh!ets. A
gists re uod the money if it fads to cure. 25c.
ILI is to rve twice, when we c:
)oy the recollections of our f
life. Martial.
RELNCE scant, 10oe FACTIAORY M
r Car-
nce.
1 Drug'
en-
rmer
I1OAS
utreai
any -
must
You will never find time for
thi ; .if you want time you
ma161 it.—Charles B :ton.
LEMON
Le on baths ar
Wes. Indies. Thre
are Cut up and lef
half an hour. Th
fresh ing. -
ATHS . •
popular in
or four le
to soak in
bath is very
Rheumatism -1-° urrdin3t
anew specfSn, fent by
es receipt of 11 DR. ROUBY, P.O. Box J66, Mora
CUTTING SCHOOL--m.k.rr send to
aloguel C. ak D. SCHOOL CO., Moat
urs.
mai!
sat
railer. and D ma-
oai-
1.
Ick
a
1 to
F
(t1 SAID -One Simpson Dry Prose
tlechine. with screen. elevators, so
Johnson dry pan ; also 9 Cornell Hand Presses; a
good ni or and very little used. Apply to Bricks. It
616, Bo rd of Trade, Montreal.
ZITHER
oiN0LE
or
DOUBLE{ LUBE.
ss t 0.0. D. to say address
W 11 mail section it requested.
WM., B. NORTHAM, TORONTO, 0
One of the most valuable products of the farm is a fine crop of Moneta. To grow the
heaviest crops, the very finest selections of seed must be sown.
STEELE BRIGGS' Prize Mammoth or Giant Lon$
Red MANCE' haute greatest welgbt-prodt>icer known. Require des, wo11-
enriched snit, and will yield enormous Crops of dean,
sound, well -formed roots of great wgight. Price by mail (post•paid) per Ib., fso.l
5 lb. lots or over, inc. lb.. or 4c. per Ib. 1o& if purchase pays oarriaKe,
S's.G1Ibt YOirai-shaped z;
Naligwa
A grand variety for shallow soils ; grows large, hand• ,1 `
some, clean, sound, heavy roots. pl'1t18 by mail (poet-
paid) per lb., sac. ; s -lb. lots or oj,W, Oc. lb., or 4c. per lb lies
if purchaser pays carriage. I
STEELEI BRIGGS' Ciant Yellow ,��t`i1,,•,R �;
GLOBE MANCELpt ao • raowoaoivis i' �� , •�' �� t -.
.,, •,...
ground, with a i wall tap root; bulbs large, fin
lobe shape, sound and heavy. Prloo by mall
(post-paid) per lb.,s:e.; 5 -lb. lots or over, 19a. ,; ,; , ,•; ��� �..
per lb., or if purchaser pays carrtiare. at 4O
per lb. Ins. !
Are dt to buy
The Saint to plant.
IIIDIANWOI4ANSBALMI
"AS A PARTURIENT MEDICINE.
hOIICT
Bo` Rosarie
Crucifix*
Scapular
Rel'gious Piotureis, Statuary an
CNU. II ORNAMENT8,, Eduoational w¢
Mall orders receive prompt attention.
p. J. SADyIER CO., "QUE.
T)IE MOST TRIT1OUS.
- ` STEELE, BRIGGS'
Famous Garden,
Flo er and FieldRoot
Seeds a e sold by leading
tt a • me hants everywhere
A thorough terminator* test is made :with ' all " Garden, Flo
l i
they are seat oat. and a Field Trial is made upon our own gro
' `'quality. The utmost care is given in the interest of buyers and planters.
OUR NAME 18 OUR TRADE MARK. See that' ft
packages when buying your' supplies;; All enquiries
Rad Field Root Seeds before
ds each season to prove their
VIWWWWW Mr
BREAKFAST—SUPPER
NEW BOOKS. 1 .
The � �
$feliowi ornP tes tit -Gillet of
ks just added to the Pickering Pu 1'
-braxy, nioaitarnrr x '
Life of Francis Willard Anil or
831ife and Tunes of Sir Ieaae;Book
t)B 'ear
88 My Father As I ;Resell laf IM D' 44 e ,
Milano- of Vgitads
88 Michael Faraday. :Tbompeo
ro*12Y 'k7 a ,
The Khan's, Canticles A H'-Kereigb
XISCELLA S
$ Wayside Court -phi pps� :"U Gatlin
Overcoming the .Wo C M Stiehdo
His Brother's Keepeir. "
The Crucifixion of Philip Strong ••
; ; The Twentieth Door' "
8:7 Robert Hardy's Seven Days ••
8 : Lectures to Young Men
H W Beeche
8 9 The Making of Mapl�o od
Sir W Dawso
8 0 Snap-'8hota Prtirn Bey -Life
FCTO'Bar:
1 The Potters Scheel:'- Ian McLare+
2 Methods of Soul Cultist e
Itev J 11 Clapperto
3 Richard Bruce C M Sheido+
4 AfterwardsIan McLa re
• 3 5 The Gun.Runnor #; B Mitlor+
8 6 A Year from a Reporter's Note -Boo
RHDavi
:
l3 7 Yule-LogG A Hent,
8 8 On the World's Roof? ; J M Oslo,'
9 What Our Girls Ought. to Know
M P 8udle,'
0 'How to Tell a Story Mark Twat
1 All Sorts ank Conditions of .Men
• W Retia , t
2 A Man's Value to Society N D Bills:
Architects of Fate 0 8 Martie
3.1 Gamblers and Gambling
H W; Seeds
j31i11liargaret granger A 8 Swa
BA Camps Quarters and Csenal Places
A Forbe
•
1357 Dictionary of Quotations P H Dalbia
838 Satan's Invisible World: Disp'ayed
II W T Shea
SCIENCE j
119 Dlscaveriee. and Inventiotg of the 1.:
th Century Bowled'
lie Fai y Land of Science Buckle
117 Wo d's Natural History � , Vol 1
118 ., :. Vol
119 .. , .. Vol
120 .. .. .. `-o1
121 .. ,. .. `oi J'
1'22 Ma ual of Photography Bothotn l -h
123 The Beginnings of Art Ernst Oros
124 Ga e Birds ani Birds of Prev
N Blanche d
MARKHAM.
An al 'rm of fire wan turned in on oto -
day nig t, bus no fire was materialized.
In the following sentence will be fora . d
all the l ttera in the Ehglisb- alphabe :
The q ick brown fox, jumped over t e
lazy ,do ."
The o McFadden block will, sopa e
=a thing f the past. Workmen i*iaye - :n
palling own the unsightly building b s
week, a d removing the old material.
• On Friadaq last 'ere. T. B. Wi1iis uu 1 e
Went a very difficult operation at .0 a 'e
Hospital, Toronto, and for several + a s
she was in: a very critical condition. 31
t W illis has been with her o9nsiderabl
t1}e time, and now reports her impro i
rapidly. Nothing hindering she , will e
brought to Markham in a few days.—u
Capt. Rolpb shipped a couple of Je se
`cattle- to Salem; Virginia, U. 8. btexp e s
Monday.
4G. G. Pingle jeweller of Markha • s
gi)vipg• up business, baying accepted a-
itton as traveller for a well known /Ha ++ '
top firm. 1
1Contraelor Bishop h$8reeotit aced
iyg down ;he remainder of the McFa + d o
bibck, work on which was stopped by i e
told weather.
George Pringle, of the Print& W
let two heavy elm planks fall on
foot last Friday, and he is now aiPi
pair of crutches in consequence. —Es
mist.
IOn Monday last, S.d. Konnedy, a ell
kr;own and popular young farmer of 8 OK,
was married in 'Toronto to Miss M- nie
. Urquhart. Both Mr. Kennedy and his
bride are among the most popnl of
Scott's Young folks,—Tunes.
llers
.r �' •,� S,JF{• i ...j3*:. 3' 0.K.. -'
Cu .tiv tui..
.e our Sine' Drum Land Roller with colic! head&
Prig right, cash or credit.
i' I. ad'Corti. Wheys, Buggies. Wagons; ate-
.
Tho .Speight Wagon and any make ot
buggy you want.4 secopd-hand speeding
Carts. very cheap. r
Bepp*iring done neatly and promptly. Horse -
shoeing, new shoes 25 obs., set 10 ots.
Use Queen
Concrete Walls, 8'
TO MUNICIPAL
W. J. 37
Is the end broken of your shaft 7 Get
one ot our Steel Shaft Ends which cost
you only 00 cents, and make it as good
as new. See them,
W. H. JA CK,S ON.,.
O'BRInN do HARE,
We endeavor toplease etch customer of oars.
To do this. othing but Sigh -class Portrat-
titre is peritted to leave oar Studio, and sat.
iafactiyn is uaranteed. Outdoor calls prompt-
ly attended o.
•
Whitby Gallery°ooen every Tues';;
day, Friday and Saturday.
os, Stable Floors, Hog Troughs, Sidewalks and Cisterns.
rite far p ticulars and pries of Cement
COUNCI i 8—
Cantons Concrete Culvert and Sever Pips.
Send for price list.
MONET TO LOAN
ON
An oiaee of the above Bank hal been'opeiied
at Pickering in Cie premises formerly occupied •
by the Ontario Bank, where a general Banking
business wil l be done. Highest rates of interest
allowed on deposits. Drafts on New York
bought and sold. Special attention to the col-
lection of sale notes. Collections made at all
points.
T. H. McMILLAN,
f3E8. $EItR�._
Cashier. Mann
1
Ib:
whi
bett
at running and solicit the farmers trade,
endeavor to hold by giving aat good or
han any other mill. Flour exchanged
t on any system to suit the farmer.
White Daisy Fa
Golden City Flo
Keasimi Pastry F
Bran.....,, .........
Shorts
Midlings
sly our
r.......
our.
Agent fir Fore, Life Accident, Pial.
Glans and Steam Boiler insurance]
Conveyancing carefully done.
Private and other fonds on hand.
p rtyoa'theeouth west corner of nig
and eh streets. beteg part of the D. Leat.
ens Notate. tor sols very cheap.
W. V. BICHABJ BON
Ontario bales block Piekertne
e , � others purchaesingia quantity of dour
on . time will be supplied at wholesale prices.
The uadere$ggnned have decided to open a Meat
market is PieUring village where' all kinds of
FRESH and SALT MEATS,
• SAUSAGE, POULTRY and;
OYSTERS in Season may be
tOtin
Shop opposite Gordon House.
OUR MO 'PO:—One gcalit, only and.
that the best.
Frites rigid.
r L—•- AND
$iction Pun s`
put in on shortest notice.:
Orders left with D. •F. Every, Picker-
ing, will reveive our prompt and
very careful attention...
Windmills of all kinds sold when,wanied
GEO. GIBROW,
CLAREMONT, ONT
kiM+
but a
see ilk
on silo
irate Price, whish will not give any trouble
arcs of satisfaction and delight. C*U an
plea and prices. All other wheels repair
notim.
AviNti. A
aondu
goods at
oods, Fine
11. at closest
selling to
ted by my
owe'st prides
all Papers
e Genera Store busineaa heretofore
other, I am prepared to offer best
and have already received new Dry
Boots and Shoes, for spring ear,
ake room for further shipments, I
than Oust.'
1of Cod -Liver Oil with H
(,Phosphites. We are
to trust in his answer.
1 For twenty-five years d
tcirs have prescribed 0
$>tiulsion for paleness, we
razeoa
ta
•in flesh.
Its creamy Dolor and i
leasant taste nil' keQ it
. y ase for thin
Boats en.
o other preparatidn ofArer oil is like it. On't lo
e and risk your beealth b
�:• +g something unkno
_' • d untried. Keep • in
t ii a t BCOTT's EMU'LSIO
wale stood the test for
arter of a century.
oodrugists. -
OdWNE, Chnists, gToron.
to.
rees Trees Trees
At the old Central Nursery le miles
north of Greed River, established a quar-
ter of a century ago. Yon can get most
any quantity of good Norway Spince from
8 to 8 feel. Red and Black urrants,
Red Raspberries, Marlboro. uthbert
Highland, Hardy and Miller. n Blaok
Raspberries the Erieis the bee in call.
titration. In Strawberries the Wilson,
Warfiold, Williams, Michel's Early,
Creacent ' Seedling, and Domi ion and
other sorts if wmnted. A limite quanti-
t+. of apple ;tree. in stock. ,
I am also agent for all kinds o nursery
ltoolt grown at the most reliab1S nursery
i>s Oasadaa, E. D. Smith, Winona, Ont.
alit afar prices of ,anythipg for the
rdon, oroba do;
nlr laT■wn to j�j$
fit ls4 $e OPKINS} Green' Rimer•'
iii Mario..
Has changed hands and a
bright new stook of Tin -
war and Granite
-
has been opened
Coal Oil ; always on
hand.
Repairs g roJnptly attende
to; while you wait,
re-
5,5
•
I ..
•
•
ic1
enJack Was seated in : a moat pr : • : 1
s position on the top of a 8m:al ye
lw wagon, and wiles.lashing -out fuel
• oy at- her ponbkomita wi ►h
: Odea dandled, twcathon ed` + uir
.• which eh: had just got from a P :'ga
Indian in exchange for a blu::'1
indkej chief. Her cayuses war : tw
tells securely strapped to the ago
var ,oua :parts of her bridle, th
light-yello* one,: with both arms miss-
', ing, representing to her lively i ••agin-
,� ., a .ion a tine. buckskin steed; the +ther.
, Wihieh had originally been a
' ble piece of walnut furnitur:, bu
d apparently stgod the etre o
ch bad weather, until it h: d- as.
ed a mottled, .degraded aspe• t, do.
i duty - as1 ek vicious, unmana:: eabl
nto.J
..Jack nd her spirited team wer
yawn u. comlfortably in the par Belo
am of shade before the shat an
om dm,. to time, during her i «gain
y race over a prairie infeste• wit
stile 1 diens, she would let y' a.
a row fr • • i the bow which w : s he
1 teat tr :asure, shriek out deli _ hted
ly and bleed -thirstily, "Another ndia
bites the dust!" and then fall t lash
ing her steeds -more ,furiousl than
ever in er attemlpt to esca . her
p rsuer-
There'i : y be misguided poop e' who •
ink t: t a little girl only rev :•n an
half : rs •old and of except onally
Issstocra io . lineage ' should hay : • been
gaged in more ladylike pur:tilts—
. p ying • • ith dolls, for exampl I
f.. is true hat Jack •ad dolls, b t ahs
n ver p1 y.d with hem. Ignore • t and
unthinki g but k ndly rated es in
England had sent • er dolls fro.. tim
to lim: dolls wi h beautiful flaxen
it and langui: o'ng violet-bl e eyes
ut the, were al carefully pu away
u d we regard: • by Jack with either
• ' u concea ed cont mpt or pert at hr -
d' eren . Jack as not that ind of
li tle gi 1. • She as as atraig t and
lithe an active a : a boy, and • er big
gray e • look.. • out curious y and
• fearlessl from a tangle of . short,
dark-bro n hair •• a world al level
prairie, : nd towe ing Rockies, and In-
. %dians, a . d order! es in scarlet units;
and pont and government tra and
Leek-Metf • rd rifl s. Her ba . dismaln es w re Jac • ueline ;Albert Mar-
•jo iba. c : .She sad ben offer -d up,
w n to. young to protest ext pt by
un ntellis ible se mss et the,'a star of
t he ancestors, an . had been basely im_
po upon and made to bee the
na of people hp were ab_ s • lutely
unknown and u • isdteresting t • her.
;a. (one stopped o consider t . t be-
ca Ise her pnothe 'a gr ndmoth : ri had
been a noted F ench 1 beauty Ile.
Jacqueline •d'Erl' . • t—that was • • very
' •' good reason for . • awing after her a
helpless • glish nfant, who w: a cer-
tainly n' beauty : t that early • :reed
of her c, reer. they *imply to d the
officiati . g clergy n, land he • • ured
a sayer' oblet of wat o'er he con-
vulsed •'untenanc: an ineerorab y an-
nounced that her ame wasJacq eline.
Her mot .er, having thus esltabli:. ed a
claim fo her side of the family gave
way to • • r husband, and Captain Eve'.
- ton put Inn a counter -claim! fo his
family • u• annexing "Mar joriba . a" to
"Jacque me." "Alberta" w: s . a
joint co 'cession to the reigning .: wily
and an official recognitionof 0- fact
that Ja queli.ne rejoiced in the same
birthda as the Prince of Wal:: This
magnifi.:nt profusion of nam: was
luckily reduced in ,daily - prate .e - to
"Jack," which wast a moat hasp and
appropr eta name for her. Lif : was
too sho t and exciting in that little
•ut-of-t . --way corner of the Can: dian
Northw t Territory to waste ti.. in
bestowi •g majestic . appellatio.: on
any on :. The . garcon manque : ffect
about J: ck impressed every one. She
eould r de as straight and al t as
far as • :r father, never rising to the
trot to ease her tired little bones, hut
• sitting • roudly and tirm>ly in her • o3y's
saddle; and she had a way of ca • ter-
ing wi ely and carelessly down 'ills,
•: and of ging her fourteen -hand • •ny,
Nellie, across swift little moun ain
sitream: , and up and down impa : ble
trails, that was deoidedly , mctecul ne,
and ca • sed the grown-ups with . er
to shu der as they followed un i11-
ingly. Broken toys had no place in
her ex stance, but a lame .pony wa a
calami y of moment, and to be obli: end
to go i • the trap instead of being allow-
ed
ll•w-
ed to 'de her bronco when her fat . er
went o. one of his forty -mile drives to
an out ing detachment waitcna of t • e
great:: t sorrows that life held for h .. r.
She observed certain proprieties in
her rid ng which were rather puzzlin
Altho • h she loved her boy's saddle o
the ut er exclusion of- even the nro t•
fascin: ting of pigskin side-saddles, y t
she feinted to be seen riding in knit:-
erbock:rs. They were, usually, mo
estly . idden under a full kilt of blu
serge: That fact, : however, did n t
preve • t her appearing at any time i
'a pair o$ gorgeous buckskin snap
embro dered up the 'sides and adorne
with .'nnumerable ermne skns. Ther
seeme i to be a subtle difference be
tween knickerbockers and shaps tha
appea ed to Jack.
Jac knew a great''many things that
older
posses
forma
of rel
that s
grow
tling
they
ing h
selves
Jaok o
bette
thou
child
Such
think
to su
forth
ithe s
'horse
She
,• •
•
- forth to, Bighwood; •
1- ages, quite alone, an
te checked iy ' the fact
a most c > rttalb to moo•
t and ro ing Indians.
n were h : r special . del
k numbe less friends
o had pi •ked up a ooll
, of the Blackfoot lang
e wayslatteringly in
races .ss . u borse-swap
; The In sane, on their
ly- poli e' ...to :'Jrok,.
, "Howl' impressively
t the tr il; and they "
f her r their 'trio'
while • :y waited to
and wo applaud he
• deligh wily when she
mount one and go bu
e ing ab u the inclose
- good t es were sunt
a by the a• earanoe of
b
r
n
ss�rt t
4 4l Ki fy�.�r.
. Eease,
145
d
g
It
..
� f4a
.
e.
.
.s. a nearest vlll
entirely un-°
hat she was al
ter wild cattle
Indeed, Ibdialis
ght. She had
ong them, and
uial knowledge
age, and- was al-
crested in pony;
tllag► ext editions
ide, were grave?.
nd -Wod say
vt hen the� met on
uld offebr to let
y lilt ponies
e the Inspeotor
pluck and laugh
would tearleaaly
king and plung-
re. Unless such
warily; out sh'rt
her 'mother on
the
the vena da Jack w uld eujoy herself
hugely; »d would ask i umerable
questions of the In lane,- and inform
herself oroughly : s to ' ' the move-
ments cif the diff :.rent tribes: just
when • th Stonies w uld came to trade
with t e Peigans, a d when the Koot-
enais i s ht be e oted tre visit the
Bloods, a • d other indred, topics of
burnin ntereat.
•
: •
The 'e gan soout
d interpret r of the
friend , : nd usual
in an . bargains
t soarcel • day pa
add t er store
by exo a ging pe
arid- ri b ns for
e es and f re-pouche
servie,ere ofte
disappa : nae of
oiviliz d and lux
caret s m ltaneou:
s a noe o e melii
was the cause o
Eviston.
"What
•
she woul
I "I can't
shack ra
Indian h
dangli g
stick o a
seems e
horrid t
mikes t
oampre e
talk t ei
intelli b
venient
berries a
to be w
study e
11
• ►
•!
-
Vas
•
people were igporent of. She
ota fund- ' of mir.oellaneoua in-
ioie•-and there was an odd sort
abeity and steadiness about her
rote one es quite wonderful, and
-upt people were continuallystar-
themselves by diseoverieg that
ere talking to her and consult -
r as - if she were as, old as them -
it seemed quite natural for
now that common bl ing was
tl#an lime for a saddle -gall, al-
h ogle would not ordinariliy_exeept
en of her age to have ideas on
sysbjetc; and no one se reed to
it vas asking a great de 1 of hest
get casually that she mould gb
on her . pony, bareback, acid scour
rr nding prairie for the riding -
as d drive them into the oorral.
as also allowed to go back and
•
j
•
We 1}a
before th
dee, b
fakery
m ring.
matter
had beeo
where eft
out to
•
t
A
can Jac
ask be
• aroun
I see
nging o
an emb
bead. ch
fta,ly
Ings.
•.m un
ion.
impossssi
y, and i
hen the
d thin
y. Bu
arit e
TO 'be!
ume dreadful -looking
er the inolosure nd
oidered belt ora u-
rm before Jack, ho
aeainated with the
nd how she - ver
eratand passes my
ut she seems to
•le language q Its
is really very n -
came around ith
and. Doyle ha ns
I wish she w uld
ic."
ontlnued.
•
h`nd thehalf-breed
post were .special
y acted . as ump resits
difficulties. As
g • that; she did of
f Indian, treas res
knives,: land tit *hes
roupinel head-dress-
= and charm, their
• in deknand. The
various' articles of
Hone !childish ap-
ly with, the 'appear-
• g Inds n trophies
much o$ to Mrs.
want ith themf"
husban plaintively.
1 the co ner of the
•
CHAPTE
t
X
1
ad
DDC
rk
(oncl ud
all been a rnedto a .r
magistrates upon the Th rs-
when the huraday me
no, occasion for our t t ie
higher Judge, had taken the '
hand, and P'efterson ope
summoned before a trib nal
iotjustice would be m ted
• the very night a ter
6 the aneurism burst, nd
rid in the morning s�streto ed
boor of the cell, with a pi id
n Irks face, as though he.
in his dying moments to I
• a useful life and onw
• and . Lestrade will be
death," Holmes retarked
ed it over next evening.
•1•.
his cap u
be was o
upon t
senile u
been ab
lack. opo
well d
"Greg
about his
we chat
••
.,
• .
•
Were given the. result end` had to fisc
verytbing else . for yourself. Now,
let me endeavor to show you the dif.-
�erent steps in my reasonng. To .
be-
gin at the beginnin I approaolled
the house, as you :kow, on .foot, and
with mymind entirelyfree from a ;l
itnpreaoli. I' >tttral y began by ex-
amining the road -way, and t
I; have already explained to yo
clearly the marks of a .cab, ,vti
et sed. by Inquiry,, Must las
,there- during ttheri.night. • -`I*.
myself that it was a cab,. an
private carriage, by the narro
of the wheels. The ordinary
growler is cot tdderably less' w
a gentleman's brougham
"This was the first point g
then .walked slowly down tit
ere, as
►I saw
hon,
,I
ve keen
defied
not a
gauge
London
de_ than
fried. I
garden
pp.th, which happened to be composed
of a clay soil, peculiarly suitable for
taking impressions. No doubt it ap-
peared to you to be a mere trampled
line e f slush, but to my trained oyes
every !mark upon its surface had a
meaning. `There is no branch of de-
tective ' science which is so important
and so much neglected as thear�t of
tracing -footsteps. Happily, I have
a ways laid great stress upon it, and
Much practice has made it second na-
tare to me. I saw the heavy foot-
rearks ot the constables, but I saw
also the tracks of the two mer who
h d first passed through the g
Ij was easy to tell that they has
before the others, because in
their marks had boon entirely o
ated by the others coming upon t
of them. In this way, my secon
Was formed, which told nie tha
rden.
slab
been
liter-
e top
link
the
nocturnal. visitors were two'in num-
her, one remarkable for hie het ht, as
I; calculated fr.sn the length u f his
stride, and the other. fashionably
dressed, to judge from the entail and
elegant .impression left by his'boots.
"On entering the house thin last in-
ferenee was confirmed. My ell -boot-
ed man lay before rare. The t i 11 one,
then, has done • the murder, i ; murder
there was. There was no wo nd upon
e dead man's person, but.1• . agitat-
edexpression upon his face a ,. ured sane •
that he had foreseen his fate before it
ceine upon him, - Men who ie from
heart disease or any sudde • natural
'use never by. any chane: exhibit
station upon !their featur :, . Hav-
sniffed the dead tan's spa, I de-
t cted a slightly sour satne 1, and I
me to the conclusion that • e had had
poison forced ttpon him. A ain,:I ar-
gued that it Ihad been for•':d upon
him, from the hatred and fel expres-
sed upon his face. By the J. ethod of
Occlusion I arrived at •t lie result,
fQr no other h lion hesis woul . Imeet the
facts. Doi imagine the, it was a
leery unhear -of idea. T .6 .forcible
jdministrati 'of poison 1:: by no
Means a new thing in erimi • '1 annals.
The oases of st)olsky, in Od . :'1, and• of
,.eturier, in Montpellier, wil occur at
once to any toxicologist.
"And now !came the great question
As to the reason why. Rol cry bad
act been the object of the z rder, for
nothing was: taken. Was i ' politics,
then, or way, nt a woman 1 hat was
the question which confront d me. I
was inclined from the first t• the lat-
ter supposition, Political ssassins
;are oily too glad to do their ork and
o fly. This murder. had, on he con-
trary. been done most deli rate+ly, ,
and the perpetrator had left bi: track,
11 over the room, showing that , e had
en -there all the time. It mus have
a private wrung, and nut poli-
ical one which called for su •h a
ethodioal revenge. When 'tie in-
ription was discovered upon the wall
was more inclined than ever t• my
o inion•. The thing was too evid .nt ly
blind. When the ring was fo rid,
e%wever, it settled the question. Clar-
y the murder had used it to re ind
rictim ot some dead or absent o-
ft was at this point that 1 ak-
in
ledCpregson whether he had inquired
his telegram to Cleveland as to a
particular point in Mr. Drebber's f
mer career. He anewereul, you reme
ber, in the negative.
"I then proceeded to make a ea
nl • examination- of the room, whit
onfirmed sane in my" opinion as to t
murderer's height, and furni.hed "e
with the additional detail as to tie
Trichinopoly cigar and the le • gth c f
his nails. 1 had alre dy. •• •. s to th.
conclusion, since there was o sign.
of a struggle, that the blood whir
covered the floor bad burst f arm th
muderer's nose in hia excite •• :nt.
could perceive that the track 1 blc
ooinoided with the track of int feet.
It is seldom that any man, u i less be
is very full-blooded, breaks ou in this
way. through emotion, so.1 h+ zarded
the opinion that the crittlins l as pro-
bably a robust -and ruddy-fac d elan.
Events. proved that 1 had jud . ed cor-
telegraphed to the head of the police
at Cleveland, limiting my in utry to
the circumstances coatnected with the
marriage of Enoch Drebber. The an-
swer was :conclusive. It told me that
Drebbee had already - applied for the
protection of the law aguispat, an old
rival in love, named Jefferson Hope,
and that this same Hope was i at pre-
sent in Europe, t knew now that I
held the clue to the myster in my
hand, and all that remained w >s to se-
cure the murderer.
"I had already determine ii , my
own mind that the man who ha walk-
ed into the house with 13reb r was
none other than the man ho bad
driven the cab. The marks ifs the
road showed me that the hor had
wandered on in a way which . i would
have been impassible had the •e been
any one in charge of it. Wher , then,
could the driver be, unless be ere -in-
side the house? Again, it is a surd to
suppose that any same man would
carry out a deliberate crime u der the
very. eyes, as it were; of a third per-
son, who was sure to betray hi . Last-
ly, supposing one man wished to dog
another through London, what better
means could he adopt than t turn!
cab -driver 1 All these cowed atioue
led me to the irresistible &inclusion
that Jefferson Hope was to be found
among the jarveys of the motroplias.
"If he had been one there teas no.
'reason to believe.: that hehad ceased
to be. On the contrary, --fr. „• hie
point of view, any 1 sudden' ban o
would be likely to draw linens lr n o
Where will their grand advert ge-
ment be • ow 1"
"I don' see thatthey had much to
do with .is capture," I answered.
"What you do in this world is a'
matter o no consequence," retur ed
my corn.: . ion bitterly. "Tee q ea -
tion is, hat can you make people
lieve th t you have done 1 Ne er
mind," h continued, -more brigb ly,
atter a use "1 would' not hive m ss -
ed the investigation for anything.
There h: .been no better'oase wit in
my recol (*tion. Simple as it as,
there we e :several moat instruct ve
points a • nut tt1"
"Sim.pl: 1" I ejaculated.
"Well, really, it can hardly be 4e-
scribed otherwise," , said Sherlock
Holmes, fling at my surprise. "Th
proof of its Intrinsic simplicity is tha
without any help, save a few ver
oretpary Ideductione, I was able to la
my ' and upon the criminal wit.hi
three. days."
"That is true," said lee s
"t hav ' already explained . to y
that wh t is out of the common i
usually guide rather than a bind
ranee. 1 solving a problem of this
sort, the grand thing is to be able t
reason ackward. That is a vel•
usefu:. - complishrnent and a vet
easy one but people do not practic:
it much. In the every -day affairs p
life- it is ',ore useful to reason forwar. -
and so t • : other comes to be neglect
ed. The e are fifty who oan tease
syntbeti lly for one who can reasti
analytioa ly,"
"1 can ess," said I, "that I do tl
quite fol ow you."
• "1 bar. ly expected that you "woul
Let me ee if I can make it el M.
Moat pleo.le, if you describe a train •
events to them, will tell you what th
result w uld be. They can put thus
events together in their minds, an
argue• fro .• them that something ,wi 1
cisme to pass. There are few scopl
however, if you told tbean a restful
would be able to evolve -from their o
inner ce • aciousness what the see es
were wh oh led up to that resul .
This po er is what I mean whet* I
talk of r awning backward, _ or anal
ticalt`�u" - - -
"I and : ratand," said I:•
"Now, his was a case in whish 'r
•
r -
h
e
..
4�.
6%
himself; He would -:probithly, for •a
that at least, oontiyn i to-pertokm his
duties. There was- no reason to sup--
pose that he was going :under an as-
mimed name. Why should he :change
his i tstuet in a country where 110 - Orta
knew his original Wee? I therefore.
organized my street arab detective
corps, and sent there systelsnatically t
every cab proprietor ifi' London, anti
they ferreted :out the',man that
;wanted. How well they. sutseeded an
how quiokiy I 'took , advantage. of i
are -still freak in your recollection:Tb'
nurder of Stangerson was. an 'Walden
Which . was entirely .unexpected;:. bu,.
Which could hardly in any ease • hav
been -'prevented. Through it, as• yoti
know, I came into possession of the
pills, ilea, existence of which I had ale
ready surmised. You. see; the whole
thing is a- chain of - logical sequences
without a break or flaw."
"It is wonderful!" I cried, "You
merits should be 'publicly recognized
You should publish an account of the
case. If you wsbn't, I will for you."
"You may do what you like,- doctor,',
he answered. "See here 1" he bontinut
ed, handing. a paper over to me; "loots
at this 1" -
It was the "Echo" for the day, an
the paragraph to which he pointed. was
devoted to the Dose in question.
"Tho public,". it !aid, "have loot a
sensational treat through the sudden
death of the man Hope, who was suite
.petted of the murder of Mr. Enoch
Drebber and of Mr. Joseph Stangerson.
The details of the case will probably
never be known now, though we are
informed upon good authority that the
Grime was the result of an old -stand-
ing and romantic feud, in which love
and Mormonism bore a part. It seems
that both the victims belonged, in
their younger does, to the Latter -Day
Saints, and Hope the deceased prison
er, hails afro free Salt Lake City. If
the cue has bad no other effect, it at
least brings out in the most striking
manner the effi• iency of our detective
police force, an./ will serve as a lesson
to all foreign that they will do
wisely to sett! .� their feuds at home,
and not to car1y them on to British]
soil. It is an open secret that the
credit of this . •• art capture - belongs
entirely to th • well-known Scotland
Yard officials, j /Losers. Leatrade and;
Gregson. Th . man was appre-j
!tended, it app ars, in the rooms of al
certain Mr. b+l•rluck Holmes, who has,
himself, as an amateur, shown some
talent in the . etective line, and who,I
with such in Itructors, may hope in!
time to at ainito some degree of their.
skill. It s e •,:•ted that a testimon-.
ial of e : in will be presented to;
the two fiers as a fitting recogni-
tion of their services."
'Didn't I t : 1 you when We start-
ed 1" cried S erlock Holmes, with • a
laugh. "Th's the result of all our
Study in 8ca i i et ; to get the! a .testi-
monial
esti-monial !"
"Never •mi . ," I answered; "I have
all the.facts n my journal,, and the,'
public shall k • . w them. ln-ithe mean-;
time, you .mu:1t make,�yyourseef content-
ed by the co •iousneils of au cess, like
they Roman ser— '
"'Populus m sibilat, at mi i plaudo
Ipae denisi t. el ao nummus contemp-
lar in a
0
1d
s>t
d
ca.'''
The End.
DANGERS
Portlier Rtpor
s►a41a± Ilnw r►rlphnr.
Phi, phorus . f iction . matches have
been made for \ixty_six years and no
satisfactury subs auto for the yel.ow
cbemnioat product vhich is • the igniting
agency has - bee - discovered. ►bmef
ii
F MATCH MAKING.
inalmam
n the r.e of the findispeu
(!'over nlneuts disco, urage their Menu
-
facture on accuun of the danger to
which the persons making them are
exposed of contract ng necrosis, or mor•
tiaication of the Is wer jaw. In flus-
Iia the tax un th manufao,ure of
yellow phosphorus atones Is so high
that they are- being displaced by safety
na.ttohen. Holland and Belgium limit
the use of the chemical. Most con-
sumess, however, want, a match that
may be ignited anywhere, and yellow
phosph.oa us is the beat means of pro
duoiug this result yet known. It was
hcdfefee-whon red phosphorus was firat
produced in 1845 that this .innoxiousa
substance would take the place of the,
poisonous element, but it does not fill
the bill, though used with satisfactory
results in the snaking of safety match-!
ea.
'the evils resulting from the use - of
yellow phosphorus in match factories!
have been particularly prevalent
Great Britain, where lee Government
has just issued a Blue Book contain-
ing.
ontain-ing. the reports of Profs. Thorpe and
(Oliver and Dr. Cunningham, who were
employed to investigate the ssubjee:,
'they say the difficulty in the way of
preventing ntcrosis iss that yellow
pboaph ►rue ie stilt required to produce
the est, ik3 anywb3re matches which
the public seem to prefer.- They do
not advise that the uasp•ot the danger-
ous elmerit be - p. of ibited, because
Gs eat Britain manufactures largely
,for export' and prohibition would mere-
ly divert thie trade to other countries
'but they suggest oertain measures for
,preventing the disease.'
-They say that their investigation,
which has been extended to eleven
oauntries, bas revealed no evidence
that nef:weais is contracted unless the
working peopllo are decayed. They.
advise that- no persons with unsound
teeth be employed, that dentistry be
made-Cotnpulsory, that the utmost
cleanliness of the ' premises where
rn itches are made be required and that
Great Britain follow the exampleof
the Continent and ,America by substi-
tuting machinery for direct handling.
in the processes of manufacture.
The main value -of these reports is
not that they tell much that is new,
but that, as the result of the most
searching inquiry yet made, they con-
firm and emphasize the belief already
current that - cleanliness, ventilation
and careful attention to the teeth are
an alimnat certain preventive of .a seri-
cent
ettdus disease that hiss brought much
suffering upon -a large body . of 'work.
,71
TIIIEIJ AND LANGUID
TIIE EXPERIENCE OF AN E,S:T1L
ABLE YOUNG' LADY.
ler Bleed W46 1)001! and W steer -•$u$
Freon $1ck.. lieadae4ew And Fainting .
Spells—Sow She 1ltegalseed Hsralt6'*• - •
BloHtpi. •-
The Recorder, Broisksille::
On :one of the finest farms ig
•
ford township, Grenville county, re-
sides Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo . Smith _and_
family, `Mr. Smith is. perhaps- one o#'
the best known men be ;the •county, as.
in addition to being a practical farmer
he r-epresenta several agricultural Im~
plement companies. His family Dori -
sista of two eseimable daughters,;
the
eldest being seventeen years of age.
Pea ctorl'esspondent of the Brockville
Iteoorder wno recently called at Mr.
Smith's, Miss Minnie E. Smith; the
-
eldest daughter, related the following
etory:—"Abuut two years ago I was
taken quite ill. I .became pale and
languid, and if I undertook to do any
work about the house, would eassaily
become terribly fatigued. 1 became♦ .
subject to terrible sick 'headaches, and
my stomach became so weak that X
loathed food. My trouble was further
aggravated by weak spells, and my
feet, winter or summer, were as oold
as ice; in fact it seemed as if there
was no feeling in them. I tried several.
kinds of ;medioine, but instead of help-
ing me 1 was growing weaker. Ono day -
In Ma t oh, 1818, my fatherbrought home -
a box of/ Dr.. Williams' Pira Phis, x
immediately diirx►ontitrued' the othesl
medicine and began taking the pills.
I found/ that they helped me and fear
more be*xes were procured and by the
time I ;bad finished them I was es-
tirely well. I have never had better -
hen lth 'in my life than I am now enjoy..
ing. My appetite is now always good
and Ihave increased in weight.. All
this 1s¢ due to the efficaoy of Dr. Wily
!fame's• Pink Pills, and I would advise
tiny other young girl troubled as I was♦
to use then, and they will certainly
eure'if the directions are followed. , •
The s aboire related are im>pore
ant' parents, as there are meaty
you,hg girls jut budding into woman- -.
hoq'd hose condition is, td say the
1cairn, ore critical than their � parefnta -
i'mag' • e. Their complexion uis. le
and axy in appearance, trou lad
with heart palpitation _ heads
s rt • ass of breath on he • >rlig teed
eroi.e, faintness and her dist e-`
as
s,' i, • 0111s' which invariably ead -
o a ireenature grave unless pr t
beim re taken to bring about 'a at
Ural •ondition of, health. In this ere
glance no remedy yet discoivered cans
suppl, the place of Dr. Williaaits' ink .
Pills, which build anew th blood, ..
stren. then the nerves and 'resfore the
glow of health to pale and 1- sallow
Ghee -a. They are certain our for all . .
trou •les peculiar to the females system,
youn: or old. These Pills alsoouresech
discsen as rheumatism, neuralgia, •
part i+ 1 " pa ralysis3, locomotor ataxia,
St. it 1.13. dance, nervous hes ache, I
nery us prostration, the after e�fects
of la rippe, influenza and severe cold;
dise: 'es depending on humors in the
blood such as scrofula, chronic erysi-
pelas, etc. Do not be persuaded to ac-
cept.:. y imitation, no matter what the '
dealei may say who offera it. Imitae
tions never cured any one. See that
the fu 1 name Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
for P le People is on the 'wra
pper
arou. every box you buy.
PING BY WHOLESALE.
Awful Stories of $tarrailon 1n
Province.
A despatch to the London telegraph ,
from St. Petersburg says that !the Pro -
virtue of Hamm, which .,k3 inhabited
chiefly by Tartars, is in a •oondition of
unrest, which is likely to result in a
bad outbreak against the Government:. -
M. Goremykin, Minister of the Inter-
ior, has started post-haste to visit the
district. The - situation is the out-
come of the terrible famine. Every-
thing has been eaten, including cat-
tle which themselves had died of star
•vation. „ The people - now have only
two meals weekly, and are dwelling in
half -ruined huts, parts of the roofs and '.
wood-watrk et. which have been used
for fuel.
-The sole 4beoiipr tion' or the people is
burying their fellows, who are dying
rapidly of typhus fever. Private bene- '
volence is doing what it cart, but it
can do but little!, to relieve the distress.
Government aid was delayed owing to
the roads being blocked. In many
cages: peasants have gone a dozen
versts to obtain bread, and -some of
them have : died on the way. The peas-
ants in some .villagers attacked the local °
authorities, demanding bread, and then
lessened the police. The administra-
tion at St. Petersburg thereupon decid-
ed that energetic measures were neces.
Isary to :quell the .trouble. Large quan-
tities of corn were transported by ex-
presss trains and distributed among the
isufferers. Sanitary detachments of the
,ed Cross Society were sent toies a c •
ekes typhus and scurvy, but as soon as
the Red Cross people arrived the Tar
tars, who are Mohammedans, spread Fop
rumours that they had come to take
advantage of the misery to compel the , 4:
Mohammedans to be baptized , into the
Orthodox • faith. ; The 'Mohammedan
Priests fostered this idea. Then the •
rage of the people rose, and they ston-
fd the relief parties and refused help
rom them. The i officials are now try •
-
iRng to pacify them, and have summon-
ed, M. Soultanoff, the Mufti of Oren-
burg, who will .go to Hawn to explain
the objects of the Government.
•
• ESTIMATED' 13Y WEIGHT t a
the Sandwich Flanders °slim the
beauty`: of women by their weight..
ams,.
.
.0
•
7
4s
z3
•
1
A
�1+
TE
1
Z;
FA
T DOWN IN COLD BLOOD
BIBLE MURDER AT KAMLOOPS
BRITISH COLUMBIA.
Auss a SI I1I at Large -lila fitdinn JD& b
ralely Kula a Well -knows! Cltlsta.
Without Any Provocation.
despatch from Kamloops, saysi,
terrible murder was oommit4od
e on Saturday evening about
en o clock, the victim being .Philip
a well-known and respected
Walker had just reached home
er is day's work, and was engaged
splitting his Sunday's wood, when
Iridian, Casimire Pecheesie,, came
ng, carrying. a Winchester rifld,
lker asked the Indian what he was
ng to shoot, and Pecheesie replied
ease." ',Walker then stooped to
k up some wood, but as he did so,
heesie opened- fire. The; first but -
passed through Walker's left
ulder, and as he straightened up. hie
eiveid a seoond one in his body. The
t bullet 4ntered just below the, right
ast, and came out near the left
. Walker fell against the veraand:
the house, where he was picked u
eye -witnesses of the horrible affai
d carried into the Royal Inlan
spital, which is about 30 yards fro
e scene of the shooting. Medical ail
s summoned, but the unfortunat
n, although able to talk, was b
nd earthly .aid, and died about .a
tie
88
w
cit,
of
in
an
al
w
g
4 11
pi
e
sh
re
la
br
of
b
a
h
w
. cin
Y'
lour after the shooting. Walker mad
• a • ante-mortem statement si_mila
ti the' details given above. Afte
fi ing the shots Pecheesiejumped Sve
t e fence and made for the river
c ossing the long bridge to the reserve
H. was immediately pursued by a po.:.,
o police, but no trace of him could t
fund after he reached the reserve. Th
s arch was kept up all night, and Sun
d 1 y men were .out in all direction:,
b t up to -six o'clock, Pecheesi:
hid not been arrested. A brother. o
P .ch*'asie'a and another Indian and
loot chman were arrested Sunda
n ght, as they were in company wit
-t +e murderer just before the shooting
cheesie is an 'adopted son of• Chie
I iuie. Fourteen years ago Pecheesie
as convicted and sentenced to sevenars in.penitentiary for shooting at
astable Smith. He is also suspect=
of having murdered another Indian.
cheesie cannot escape, and it is.only
a muter of time when he will'he ar-
. r sted. Walker- leaves a young widow
t. mourn his death. She is a- daugh-
t r of !. T. Edwards, J,P., -of this
c•ty.r he murder was the most oold-
s b ooded ever perpetrated in . tinep ovi nce. There was no provocation
f r it. '
0
r
Ik
,
.
PONTON TRIAL FOR TORONTO.
The' '._
'Henrik* .f Tlsle Citene t7elllerrile vs
iteea leaa.ved Ertl 4apaaee.:
A despatch from' Toronto says :—Mr.
• J stice Robertson handed out his judg-
ent on Saturday morning changing
e venue of the Ponton trial from
apanee to Toronto.
In his *ritten judgment •hi>i Lurg1-1
s p practically recites. the, ren ar . s .he!
ade on the beach when the m
. •
act being heard. He says that not-
ithstanding the affidavits for the de -1
f ace he oannot divest himself of the,
,inion that the people who were
adhered in the street on that cold'
1 comber night were not there for
ny harmless or inoffensive purpose.
I. fact thle Sheriff acted wisely in
ading the Riot Aot, for there was
knowing -what might happen..,
The judgment goee xon to state that
o such case has ever • been adjudi-
o ted upon, before, and that; therefore,
ecedents 'do uot count. It was not a
uestion of au impartial jury only, for
e thought a good jury could be ob-
t inert, but the main thing was to
e•pediate the ends' of justice.•
His Lordship consulted with eight of.
is brother judges and found all but
e in favor of changing the venue to
toronto. Counsel for the Crown and
fir the'accuseid were both opposed to
oronto as the placel of trial. In order-
s • g a change of venue his Lordship
ammends the Crown to pay ,the
spensea of the Poston witnesses.
The Assizes in Toronto open May
1: and continue until May -1,9. The
udgea on the rota -are Robertson,
treet, Falconbridge. It is likely that
t ,e case ,will be heard by Mr. Justice
rent,. -
CATTLE BILL KILLED..:
rat or Restrictive Measure la X.
,tt, Leg/!!afore.
A. despatch from Albany, N.Y., lays:
I the Senate to -night Senator Willis'
11, providing that cattle imported in-
t " the State shall be examined and
cased by a veterinary created an ex-
t . nded discussion, it being attacked by
suitor '-'Mackey, who said it would
11 an important,. industry In the
-estern part of the State.
Senator Ambler moved• to reroute
it tee bill with instructions to strike'
• t the enacting clause. which was
c • rried Iby a vote of 28 to . 10, thus
idling the hill.
I :D ALL IIT OUTSIDE
RIG s` e•
ic says I have a peculiar bead, said
t e man who had just consulted a
phrenologist.
Hisfriend took is step back and sur-
veyed him critically.
It `looks all right, he said
Oh,. of course,-• repl i ed the other. - To
the unobservant all heads are alike.
Po•tsibly, suggested the friend, he
wan, referring to the interior.
''" f ,_..
...:�•
.
•
•
rr`
Ana
KILLED BY AN D LEPHAN
.e,
Prink frisbee tP (the eta vietlgi •
A despatch from Kansas Cit
says :—Leman Broths s' man
elephant Rajah, adde another
list of victims on onday m
when he killed his kee r, Fran
ere who is the ninth n that
has killed (tailing the seven . y
has been in captivity. $e w
bably not kill any more men, f
is a movements on foot to hav
slain. '
Fisher was 'if atoxicated When
killed. He staggered into the
quarters of tete circus
Moladay morning, b
prowess' as tin ani 1 _ tam
prove his prowess he visited
the lions' cage and th bears' d
ing out each time uniaa jured, a
went over and began to pi;
Rajah. . The elephant was i
ticularly bad mood, and ref
obey his orders. When the b
fused to open his mouth Fishe
hint on the trunk with his fie
This angered the animal,
grabbed Fisher's • arm in his
crushing it. Then the elepha
Fisher down with his trunk a
to gore him with his tusks.
were so short, however, hay
sawed off, that he oo ld not r
victim with them. rajah the
erately jumped upon Mahe
breaking every rib and or
life out of him.
at Arge
eating
,
•
Rajah.
Mo,,
ailing
to bia
ruing,
b'lsh-
Rajah
ars he
U pro -
there
him
la®
win er
tine on
of his
r. To
n turn
n, com-
d then
y with
a par-
sed to
ute re -
struck
nd he
mouth,
t threw
d tried
is tusks
g been
itch his
n delib-
8 cheat,
ing the
BUILDING COLLAPSE!.
lientttesl
1 visits* ` Wares
lieu.
A despatch from t ontrent,
building on Commissioner at
oupied by Benoit and Compa
provision warehouse Collasped
day evening, aid onelot the
Philippe Duluda, a storeman
of the building; was buried
ruins, and will' probably die
juries suptalned.
There was a arge stook of lour and
provisions in tb upper flats, and the
heavy weight used the floc a to col-
lapse, and the Oontents wer carried
down upon Dulude, ho was working
in the bottom flat. a was rled be-
neath the debris, and had th arms
broken, besides sustaining vere in-
ternal ineuries.
The building will bee total loss, and
the extent of the dafuage is timated
at about $80,000. -
a
ft -4
eet, co-
y as a
on Mon-
mployea,
charge
in the
f route in-
,
CAB TARAIETE1 S.
A lrew `7* glee Iised 1
series Ilse 1M•ta
'London has at 1
cabby. A .machine
register every olro
tion, with a ride- in
vernal is the cry
pointed the manner
have them sire pat
lip cabs that have
and managers of
tams are speedily p
machine, which is
meter, registers
whether you hav
directs your attent
you have ridden
rings on s bell, and
thereafter. If you
store the charge
a. device under the
er shifts the regul
to a 'clock. On li
.time a spring is t
on a card the amo
drivers of the ocIn
machines in first
ing badge, and are
nese. They ars
paid, in conaequen •8
uniformly polite
looks as if London
one of her greate 1
1
, rl
ser il s-
ee Taw Ride.
risen against the
tely invented will
we in oonneo-
oab, tied fro ard-
or these and see
n which cabs that
Lied in preference
that the owners
various cab 'ge-
tting them in. The
wn as the taxa -
ben yo get n
a vale or not ;
I r
to the
mile by
t every
alt in
Just .the
trol of
or from
Ling for
abed to
t of you 1
nJ whic
:. r a di
oing all
11 and
of whic
d obl'
ere to
ulsance
•
"BOULDER ON
1� wilts Rti t.
teeth
1 A des tab from
attempt has been
Irish express boun
railroad station he
the passengers
mail- boat for W
boulder was plaoec
the engine swap
away. The pa
buttheengine w
aged.
There were : a
en -board the tree
catch a steamer a
�E iftOL1SM,
The: time -wore
and altoholisin ha
gree superseded b
described by
treated patients
novelty, almost w
taste for petrole
upon the tippler
an irresistible
who devote t
fore of di
opportunity a
of petrollMu, old
cure and gut re
11
•
gent. But th
that the viot of
and melanohb y.
not tomporari y
age like atop 1
' • LON N
'1'� 'newest cry
ers is that they ar
girls.
•r•
I
HE TR
lire & die
xjPa+tww
London,
de to
from P
e to Milto
bark on
tertord.
on the t
the o•
ngers we
only adig
!amber of
on their.
Queenst o
•
fact that
the loud
half mile
eta t of a
same, as
the driv-
he wheel
the last
abow up
fee. The
put the
linguiab-
the busi-
egularly
they are
ing. It
et rid of
cieeirieSsi
y An
tick the
ddington
d, where
•ard the
large
ack, but
traction
shaken
tly dam -
merlon ns
way to
n.
LIE NEW •tCIG i ,
ices of mor ;homania
e been to : .ma de-
" petrolie •1," which
ysiciana ho have
for It as ' a grim
thout poral el." The
in, it is sal + , grows
ntil it dev • f ops into
ion. ' . ysbcians
Ives to th - various
la have not yet had
udy the fu 1 effects
their viols' as to its
re someWli t diver-.
sensus of r t •inion is
this nee! h • it Is cad
The ales oil does
imaulet° an eneoilr-.
morphine.
•
•
,.c. -
WAITERS,2.
..at•: #r .
of the 'Lou, on 'Wait-
e beim o
Os
w
ed by
FEL1j INTO l8 AMBILII.
annuli AND u. s.' SAILORS AT
TACKED BY SAMOA BEBE
woo1fo`reed to 1,..7 --engem: Ea
Meat ra a tietnnau iE'lpnartalles $M+
Plawager tri Wkleh as. Reid for
eltelty. ( a
A despatob .tr'oni A.p11, Saniod, gills:
--A
Party of 105. British and nited
States sailors were. foroad to r treat
to .the beach, atter having been c ught
In an ambtishi on a German plan ation
on April 1. The fighting was to rifle,
the British and American tars r:peat-
edly beating back their assai:ant:, who
sought to overwhelm them by f roe of
numbers. The expedition was 1 d by
Lieut. Freeman, of tee Britisb ' ruiner
Tauranga, and he and Lieut. La dadale
and Ensign Monaghan, of the U. 8..
oruisei Philadelphia, were left d •ad on
the field. '
Ensign Monaghan lei aiaed r as -
get Lieut. Landadale, and was sly of in
retiring, Two Brltiah and two sited
States sailors were also killed The
natives engaged were some of Mata-
ata's warriors, and tsever :•d the
heads of the dead offioers. The natives
lost 40 killed.
It is estimated that about sig t litn-
dred warriors attacked, the An lo -Am-
erican party from ambush.
The rebel force opened fire • n the
rear, left rank, and front of the Anglo-
Amerloan force. The friendli .: bolted.
but the marines and bluejacke : stood
their ground splendidly, A ++ erioans
and British tars firing
SHOULDER TO SHOULD R.
The Colt automatle gun with t • e land-
ing party became jem1n d, nd the
Americans and British were pr: otioally
at the mercy of ,the rebels. " etreat"
was sounded three times • -fore the
marines and blue jacketsetir
Seaman Hunt, of the Bitis cruiser
Porpoise, had an extraordii ary es-
oape. He remained with Li . utenant
Landsdale• until. clubbed over he head
and knocked aenaelrei►. The luejack-
et revived.aa the natives wer • nutting
off his right ear, and we fur r ing him
over In order 'toout off h a let ear. At
this juncture a shell fr th British
cruiser Royalist burst o the battle-
field, scaling the rebelis. nd unt sue-
ceeded in escaping to t e scab, al-
though severely stabbed n. o e foot.
Lieutedntnts Freeman a d ndsdale
were capable and popula • offs +ors. The
formai- was single, but t e la ter had
been married last June.
Captain Sturdee, of he • -
was away on an expedlt on • ith pial
oruiaer, and Gaunt's brigade s also
absent on duty.
The Samoans say Mataafa, three
000asions, had resolved to s rrender,
but the German Consul, He r Rose,
advised him not to do so, and he now
says' he will never give in, ut will
fight to the death.
The manager ut the iermapla; nta-'=
lion has been arrested and det fined on
board the Tauranga, on affil= vita de-
claring he was. moan dur ng the
tight
AMONG. THE NA is
Ina previous eugagem, nt. of Ma-
taafa's warriors were killd, a d there
were no casualties 'ran -+g t e Euro
pain force. j
• Oa the arrival of the B itis + cruiser
Tauranga at Apia the Brit sh and
United States Consuls i ued a pro-
clamation to give lata aafa a last
hhanoe, and tbe French pri is clew,
used their influence, bu al efforts
failed, and the rebels oo + tinu .d their
depredations. Property as d - - troyed
and bridges and roads w re 1 muted -
ed.
ed. O4 March 29 the en ' + y sv. s sight-
ed at Maguigl, end teach + e nue and
a seven -pounder were The
friendlies also attacked t p sen : my dur-
ing the latter's retreat an severel
rebels' were killed or wo nd
The friendlies °arryie i o + o bead
through Apia, which , + e Captain
Stuart so furious that b. we+ t to the
King and threatened to : + oot ny man
found taking heads. T e'le ng then
issued a proclamation loebid ing the
practice.
BRITAIN'S NOV 'AR
•6�
,
1
Art1'Ioty Will care the ‘icke Maxus
Sestets-lftriag again.
A despu t oh from Loudon. ya--Tbe
War Office has finalltr decid:d on the
Vickers -Maxim quit firing gun for
the rearmament of the horse and field
artillery. The characteristic eature of
tbe totem is the gradual baorptioa
of t e recoil by an hydrauli:' buffer.
The rate of fire is reckoned ; t twelve
aimed rounds per minute, bile the
weight, including mountin ' , limber,
and forty rounds of awmunit on. is ex-
actly thirty hundred weig , t, The
gun in question is regarded a In every
way equal to the sew quick- [ring gun
of the French and German + ruly, and
Inasmuch as the present ' q ick -firing
gun of tee English army ha: a maxi-
mum oV six rounds ,pier m'nute, the
adoption of the Vickers -M xim gun
will be equivalent to do bling the
fighting force of the Brit h Royal
Artillery. ,
PLAGUE SPREADIN
i!
T9 OF PHS
tir.less_ .
acts of Grain, Cattle, Cheese, &.
in the Leading Marts.
Toronto, April 17.—The 'xtceipre at
the Western oattle market here to -day
aero: just, forty , loads, .tool tiding 48C0
begs, 100 sheep and 'lambs, and a few
milkers andaealves. -
The prima : whittle brava• been -ruling
here lately for oattle were being asked
to -day, but, buyers would not pay
t$aem, and in consequence we had no
trading of any consequence, .boat :.buy-
ers and sellers preferring to !told over
tor the regular market to -morrow Fri-
day.
The ooiUinued bad oopditton of the
English markets, poor trade at Mont-
real, and weakness in the markets
aoroele the lige, are, of course, the unit-
ed causes of the dulness' here..
Quotations for cattle are nominally
Unchanged, but to -day no one was
buying.
Stockers are quotes easy at from $8.-
50 to ,3.90 per owt.
Export bulls, 8prinfers, mills cows,
'etc., I are unchanged.
Ydar1ing. lambs are a shade weaker,
'at from $5 to/ *5.40 per cwt. The rea-
son for the weakness is , that at the
present high pr•iaea butobers will not
buy.
The unsettled .and warmer Gather
has ;also a depressing effect n the
meat trade.
Hggs are steady an5i unchg d, with
51. 11 too many Light hogs anCom ng to
hand.
The top pries of "singers" i 43-80.
p�alb.; light are bringing , and
heavy fat hogs sell at net moire than
Sows are fetching 30 per lb.
Stags sell at 1c. per lb;
Stores are not wanted:
Following is the range of ,current
quotations :—
Catl e.
Shipping, .per o. t. 410 (' $ 5 00
Butcher, choice do. 4 00 4 50. '
Butcb.er, med. til g :od. 350 8' 40
!hitcher, inferi• r. . 8 26 ` 8 40
Sheet and Lambs.
Ewes,per e . . 8 00 8 50
Yearlings, tier owl: 5 Opp 5 40
Bucks, per cwt. 2 50 2 76
Spring Jamba, • .. 3 00 ;' ( 6 00
Cows, each. . ' .. 25 00 45 00
Milke s and Calves.
Calves, each.. 200 800
Hogs
Choice hogs, pe cwt. 400 - 4 371 2
Light hogs, pe' owt. '3 75 4 00
Heavy hogs, !r cwt. 3 ?0 3. 75,
Toledo; Apr'1 17.—Close-•-Wlieitt 'ac-
tive;
iiative; oaoth, 74 1-4o, May '74 3- o, July
74 7-8o, 'Corn, cash 36c, May 35 I -4o.
Oats. cash •}: , May 27 1-2o. Seed,
Dash *3.42 bid April *3.85 bi Octo-
ber 04.35 bid.
Oswego, Ap tl 17.; p.m: Wheat
market, stead ; No. 2I red, to 84
1-2e; No. 1 no thorn, 89c ; No. 1 hard,
89 1-2 to 90o. orn steady N . 2 yel-
low, 44e; No. 3 yellow, 4io ; N . 2 mix-
ed, 41 to 41 1 2o. Oats sbo more
strength; No. ;' white sold at. 37 1-4c;
No. 3 white, 36i • to 37o liarl y.mar-
ket shows no hange; Canada nomin-
ally 83 to 88e e western 53 to ; an
entire absence of transectionai; prices
therefore nominal. !tail i rei hts to,
Now York—wheat, peas, rye, a d bar-
ley. 10 1-2c per Cwt.
— I
DIED SEEK 0 HIS IoORrUNE.
The Wady gra salieri >slaee ail teGYerred
ea 'mhos Trail.
A despatch rom Brentford, Ont.,
ways:—Mr. A. ..Slruthdee, for a num-
ber of years :1'.R. ' agient here, on
Tuesday, recely. a-lettee front Mr. F.
°ll.r 1Vilacn, ageit of the Hudson's Bay
lit at Vermis; ion, in tole Peio4. Rive
sr district, saying that a body bas
been found ou ]posed to i:hai}t of his
son Harvey Sl;rathdee, ho Was last
In that regiuni last fall. The body is
reported to h've been toultd by In-
dieus, and' to ave been partially de-
voured by will beasts. Mr. Stratbdee
is making an effort to hav
Pied if possible and brough
burial.
it identi-
home for
The circumstances of Lite f fid. affair
will be *ems nbered, biro Fitrathdee
and bis sou were travelling- alone, via
the Edmonton, route, into the Peace
River district 1 in search of gold. One
morning in September last he son got
up before his gather, took s gun, left
the tent in aerah,of wane all game,
and never reurned. - The distracted
father spen : en days - all alone in
searching, then started fo help, fall -
Ing in with two men on th : trail, Who
assisted bim en days lo ger in the
search, but without s coons. Mr.
Strathdee, sr.. was then t •reed to re-
turn home • the wince closed in,
leaving his 1 • t sou behind Since then
nothing has 11• .0 heard • hien.
gaa tittti Willi Renewed VI r th the
raaajnwb.
A despatch from London, ye v. -Dew
patches from. the East show that the
plague has spread through t, A.aig.
is raging • with renewed vi plus In
the Yun jaub. In Hong ' 'eon, there
base been forty-three .deaths, •lass•e
pr
airtime is eaterslee
HOLD B
l41*a Rave it
Curtis and
A despatch
News has r
Hudson's Bay
country that
recovering th�I
ate Sir Arthu
the timber w :I
eon over t 8,
body .was is
hold it for rale
Colinpany bav!
Ian to recov'
la 1104 by
da y IR the
DY FOB. RA.
IReussias
lire to *erre
NMI Seattle,
hod Daw
poets in the
here is Doan
body of t
Ctlrtib, wh
ilo trying t
Ashcroft
ovsred by I
The
sant 00 8 t
the ;main.
-' tr 410„,t
oy of t
to
Om..
r sir Arthur
der Theist.
't'asb., says:
n from the
Mud Raver
prospect of
unforfun-
perished in
reach Daw-
trail. His
diens, who
udson's Bay
ousand dot-
. The body
e .00aat. In -
e Hudson's
try and re-
order to
WaR1 UNCLE
f
Iy'
Age
ITEMS OP INTEREST AD U Ti s
liSUSY YANKEE.
Neigh- Iiatbrest an His' Dleas-!tinsel
Qf Moment and Alrth Gathered from flls
Daily Record.
A bill hes taunt introduced
Wiromsin �cgislature to tax news*. { a
papers. t.-
Protttnity is forbidden by both tits 4
army and the navy regulations of the
United States. -
The Indian population of the United
States is 325,464, a distance in fifty.::.;:
years oe only 62,765.
In 'Cumiee land County, N. J., the
farmers -are catching crows and selling
ee
them to, trap shooters. .
Only seven and one-half miles of=
horse railroads remain in Massachu-
setts. The 'trolley is responsible.
Capital punishment is not inflicted in:„
five Slats -.Colorado, Maine, Michi
gen, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.
Dr. John Caspar Branner, the new,
vine -president of Leland Stanford Jr.
University] was graduated - from Cors,,::
neli in 18$24,
Levi Z. eater, the Chicago million -
acre, - usually works with a cigar in.
his mouth, Thin cigar is never lighted
during business hours. i
Minneso a and South Dakota are the .
only two tater in the union that have -
half of their population made up. of •
foreign -born residents, + i
Rev. Newell 11 Hills, who has sue-.
,
seeded De. Lyman Abbott in Ward
Beecher's old church, was once a farm
hand at a Lary of $10 a month.
George cC. Harvey, who has just
purchased the North American Re
view, beg n work as a reporter at the
age of 18 on the Springfield Republi•
can
A bronze .cannon ' of Spanish make
has been ¢ant' from the Philippines to
decorate the Maine monument in Sas
Francisco, It Is the gift of Admiral
Dewey.
'Califorp a has forty mountains the
highest puke of which are more than
10,00J feed .above the sea. Colorado has ,c
fifty-nine peaks, which• are more than
13,100 feet in attitude.
The late Judge it. M. Dursey;otHoww-
How-
ard County, Md., was born in a snow-
storm, rode twenty miles through one
to .be married, and was buried in the •.
midst of the last blizzard.
On October 22, 1888, there were in
transit. in the United ' States 93,223 .
boxes of teraons; on the same date in'
1897 tile a were 18,500 boxes, and in '•
1896the umber was 11,200.
Henry [1.,-.3 Higginson, the Boton -
8rillionatiie, Was asked the other day
what he would do if he were suddenly .
without 4 dollar. "Dor - he replied.
"I'd take the first job that offered!"
General Lee. and hie wife occupy only •
part of a house in Havana. Their
breakfast consists daily of coffee, and
rolls, the latter brought from a little
Cuban r taurent across the street.
- The eagle first appeared on the seal
of the United States in a design sub-
mitted to Congress by William.Bar-
ton of P iiadelphia, in 1782. The de- .
vice was adopted June 10th of that
year.
Justice ohn M. Herten, of the Uni-
ed States Supreme Court, has ' a bass
voice of henomenal depth and splen -s
dill quality. As a young man there
was solve talk of his making a living ..
by it.
James
nia millic
name fro
child . of
One ot* th
ata nt i nopl
k n Ali Haggin, • the Calieor','
Haire turfman, got his odd:..
n his mother, who was the '
Ibrahim Ben Ali, in pis day
highest officers in the Con-
e court.
= A NAT.ON'S DEAD.
tr:•
Some' ofa Naval We+[wee ` *to' reit
'Westminster Abbey.
The wall -known saying, "Westmrrie r
star Abbey or glorious victory," attri- -.
buted to Nelson when he boarded the
San Josef ,at the battle of Cape Vire._ ..
cent, seems to point to the hero's own
wishes as to an abbey grave. But for
some unknown reason, when the end.,
came at the famous battle at.Trafalgar: .
1805, Nelson was buried at St. Paul's .
.,..
and the abbey authorities, finding e
orowds going' there to gaze on his.:
last resting place, had an effigy made: '
of him grid set it up near Kempen-:
teldt's monument, in order to attract
people back to Westmaneter, with .the b,
desired relsult. The figure now stands ,: =
in the Islip Chantry Chapel with the:: -;
other funeral effigies, and is a very
life -like and good representation of the
great man. It is said to have been :
copied from a smaller figure for which
Nelson sat, and all the clothes except •
the coat he actually wore. Maclise,
who borrowed the hat for his picture:
of "The Death of Nelson," found the
marks of the eye patch on the inner t.
lining. end the stamp of the period is •
the orownf :x
•
NATURALLY.
First T1ief—What did yer
they yelled "Stop thief f"
Second teriminal-1 didn't.'
A SANSTIILE PREV"EllENOE
•
r.t
•d
r
•
F,.
o-,
to
4,
,s°
•
•
e
Y:
•
4 ".
• .
3
•
•.
o err
Mas. Brown—Yes, she's engaged. Anda
she once told me that- she - wouldn't
marry .the best man .hiving,!
Brown—Well. I suppose sheer rat I
er 'be happy than consistent.
r
mss
1
•
t.
1'•
,
1;=
A
•
z.
TO OUR SUBSORIBBRB :By starring
to the address label on your paper you
Gan always ascertain the date to which
our subeeription to Tun Naws is paid.
mittancee are acknowledged by a
►pge of ate on label on the first paper fol -
me receipt of money at this of foe . Always
D e date paid ahead
t fatting goo.
itING. ONT., APRIL 21, 1899.
CALI§MS
_ — hie
'fly j et n
enj
is in isp
188
here bill
-- 188
wee wit)
—$ohn
fro!
B. B
angb
Masi
stock
alta
Little grains of scandal,
Little chunks of ice,
Make the Yukon country
Not -a bit too nice.,
But the fiercest winter
Klondike ever knew
Ie not a patch compared with
The frost of Tupper Two.
ken pax is prevalent in thi coal-
iw,
!►min Hartriek of 'the base -line
sed this week.
Maggie Peart, of Toronto, is
seek with friends.
Ids Bunting is spending the
i Toronto friends.
A. White shipped'a carload of
here on Thursday,
ash, of Liverpool, is about again
trot in a robust condition.
ey Harris Bicycle 1898 for Bale
chem ne4rly new R. A. Bunting. *
—here is an unusually large amount
of eopnterfeit coin in circulation in this
vicinity.
—dohn
W. Lew`and family hays got
nicely settled in tee Logan . cottage on
King � etre$t.
isslH. B. Pearn, who has been with
city fends for, the past few weeks has re•
turn bonne.
—Councillor Richards is having the
`road planter applied these days. Such is
not al bad !idea.
—Mrs. !Rey.�A tkineon land family of To-
-tont°, a eiwit_Rev. McAuley and family
at the Maiase.
—lp. M and Fred Banks, of Toronto;
were here this week calling upon their
numevousi friends. .
—Mr. Manley, er;, is 1n a very feeble
condition we understand, at the residence
of his son, William, of the base line.
—Sucker fishing :furnishes sport for.
some of one residents these days, and we
have siomdtallers from other localities.
— T diegree team of the I.O.O.F. vis-
itedbitty Tuesday evening and assist•
ed tb lodge of that place in official work.
-- E. Vanetone shipped a mixed
(iarload of stook on Wednesday.io the city.
The oensiginnent included bogs and Battle.
few of our scribes are beeoming
weary!in. well doing. Come people have
a hand in editing the beet local paper in
this •
.ty•
�•'1 first eonsignment of- gypsies
`passedthrough here on Wednesday bead-
ing for the east. They were a respectable
lot of critters too.
—A 'number of Goodwood youths were
here fi hing for suckers' and judging from
their j vial disposition) they must have
made great haul.
—Geo. A. Gordon ' I suffering from a
protracted siege of imp amination of the
eyes. We are pleased o know, however,
that bel is improving.
—M. M. Doughtynd family left for
M&nitoa on Tuesday Where she will in
future reside. She took considerable set-
tlers elects with her. -' 1
—We wish to extend our most sincere
sjmpatky to Joseph and Mre. Bye, on ae-
Bonne of the death of their daughter. De •
ceased was ill bet a few short weeks.
—His many friends will mise the famil-
• iar face of Wallace Luke at the Rouge hill
after Monday, May 1st, He has smiled
!'kir? 9 tud 99499te4• tg11p mere for
aver tw my years ago! e.
—Mr . W. Woodruff is having bei reef.
coos o English avenue repaired before
asenmi g ppeeedsion. We refer to the.
Webb ]welling. Am g other improve-
ments she is having .a new kitchen built.
—Tedd last couple o days Dr. Young
has bad II .roma notion f taking the prac-
tice in Searboro, wbio was suddenly va.
Bated b Dr. Drammo d, but after due
consid and"'th ugh the solicitation
• of frien e, has decided to remain in Pick-
eting.
--R. • Arinatro
,. ments e to leave
North• t, but Wed
1 to : from Hastin
so assis there in put
ery in a mill. He
i8 now 1 ere engaged.
—Joh Dewyr has
the 2nd oonoeesion
Wednee ay the roof
°aright fi e from a dei
bat for e persistent
Stotts d David Dec
have !reduced to
—Wb' e we know 5
of this 5 wnehip are a
reoeivin abuse from
the b le opinion
said Be tire is no.
Many pl on on the ro
at the pr sent time ar
simply f om the fact t
not do t eir duty:
- --The Western b
been eon iderably fix
oast two weeks, the i
• Wing kal °mined and
papered.. The comm
week an4 will conside
granting the said plat
go to preps too early t
'What prOgresa was m
hug
Por
her
tea
Pro
of t
sbo
bas
, 1
•
A. i
1, ,
1,
If
1 11 1
Lif
on
wit
Ho
OD
His
Mo
at 1
bus
wil
ion
8
bad all' UMW.
this .week for the
esday he received a
, requesting him
g in new machin -
opted the offer and
cosy residence do
est of the village.
of said residence
tive chimney and
fforts of Mrs. Geo.
er the place would
hes.
at the pathinasters
persecuted people,
11 aides, we are of
that in some oases
ithout foundation.
ds of this township
almost impassible
at pathmasters do
11
Ki
Of
he
for
OD:
rec
me
fro
fro
ba
cli
th'
loa
OIL
11
son
he
ThM
1
the
bee
Tti
WO
An
to
s0
lid
•
:
R
3r
Li
H
StC
H
P
Jr
BI
hu
2n
1 premises have,
d up during the
terior of the place
other portions of it
siouers met this
the advisability of
a license, but 'we
be abl% to report
de.
Mien of the Whitby
sionery Society will
in the Methodist
e afternoon session
—The 'annual cony
District, 'Woman's Ili
be held April 26tb,
church, Pickering. T
will open at two o'eloek, a special feature
of which will be the queation drawer led
by Mrs. Platt, President of the Bay Of
Quints branch. At 1;80 au interesting
progriuxi be given, consisting of greet -
Mrs. Pla t and Mrs. Geo. Brown, besides
jugs &oil:sister societies, addresses 17
epeeial m ie. All are welcome to bath
8
S
770
•,
Gardening is fashions
The Armstrong sale o
success.
Geo. Seldon is nigh
Union just now. '
Mrs. Moneypenny, of
Brien, sr., for a few
A. W. Law andwife, o
over Sunday with his
Soma people have the
the cutting of Post's h
e it.
Mrs. W. Howlett will
e east Pollard 'team
! time.
The leak in Mr. Brok
n repaired and his
ing order.
Mr. Miller of the No
Insurance Co., was b
Meas.
W®. Welbourne, of To
friends. He expects
olulu some day next we
Albert Birrell was able
hureday after a fortnigb
Condition is much' impr
Scarboro Township eon
day next et O'Learv's h
a. in. for the transact'
Re ort bas- it that the
be ouble tracked betw
and this place during th
mer. -
Mr: Salsbury, of York,
g and .other friends her
is fingers crushed bet
oe his holidays.
oltn E. Gee has seen
ery stock from E.
r Hamilton. As
gnized as one of the
in the business, sto
this nursery has n
the Winona vineya
grow as it is matured
ate • Call and gee M
k of purchasing tree.
le hereabou
Friiday was
switchman
oronto, is wi
Ye.
Oshawa, we
people.
udacity to
d nes
e�
in a ve
f1
at
De
1
1
ulv
ne
1
ire's d
a now
b Ame
this w
,.is h
leave
k.
o bout to
i the ho
v d.
c' meets
11� Wobn
n of gene
G. T. R. li
n Port U
approach'
is with 0.
. Haled o
sen two pa.
5.
a
f
h
7
•11
I 1
e
r
n
ed the agen
. Smith, Wi
Mr. Smith
mot foram
k turned o
equal, St
cannot he
in this north
. Gee before y
for planting.
I:. Fairpor
e harbor has had two
ing gravel daring thi
oes *ere consigned 1
ur fishermen, W. W.
ey have each star
May they have au
• e F ora Carneth 1
this week and el
air was the prope
thew 00.
apt, 'Brien has arri
Mad line from Oakvi
and rgoing repairs
oral now looks Ilan
co and is decided)
thy.
iso write, bd.-'
an in Whitby e
agie rate Harper.
elan rented from t
•
f
pori
rch,1
011,
rve4
h'
Cow
else
on
rton,
We SOD. R Bro
Whit , F Mechio,
venni) , E Holtby.
etth we, F W C
illipe, N Littlejohns,
2nd R Stevenson
ndin, Z Holtby, W
Giihu. y, W Palmer.
•
e
n
1
e
g
e
e
foreign school*
week, and the
Toronto.
rks and J,a
�ihe fishing
le snows,.
ded with bade
for K.ingsto
ty of the W.
y
•
a
t
p
n
u
•
1
e
r
ed in port wit
e where she
urine the winks
improved in ap
mach mot.
- Mansfield, . ea
'gaining mat
'be dispute iii ov
e widow Palmar
0
6CHOOI Ile outs:`
of Brougham
199:—P g lea
1 Willson.
C Phillips, R
s, A Bell, N
e, O White, R
-B Alger, 11
nd A Burke
D White, W
y, M
don,
1st —1
Mips,
Sanderson,
!ogle, A Wa
Hamilto ,
Carleton, W
C Sanderson
public 'sobool for
ing--A Hoge, B
nt—D Alger, M
inion. Jr 41b—
echin, L Burke,
Burke, W Willson.
ogle, .1
ger. E
johns,
F
arrey,
almer.
e, E
rown.
Gil -
fir pt
s, H
1d. Jr
Ie, J
inton. 0
qua)), M A.
billipe, L
u, A Littl
S Catherw
Sr 3rd—F
wie. W Bu
H Dell. B
F Cochr
rown, M
Pt 2nd -
Faulkner.
d, E Willie
Catherw
ard, M II
Kinsale.....
bf
fuller,' widow
er, is under the
of
F yd II �, to
ed M eta Harkin
•' i with Toronto fri
b r nein Mrs. Aber,
. Platt, Prestd
will be in ch
ben on Sunday
curs Laerrence
e • ed the contract of
t c.. W. Disney's
J. W. Rogers is in
o u going to cultiv
re. Mary and Belle
T. G. Oolwill ship
on Monday a nuns
oat the farmers of th
The services of ou
ennis, is very 1req*occulthas been quite *occult
he has treated.
Miss Ada Rogers an
of Meant Zion, bad oh
on Wednesday eveni
were ranch appreciate
- The funeral of the
passed `through here.
Burial Ground the d
was well known here a pinch ncb regretted by
'relatives and friends.
C. J. Stephenson, wi
horse, may be seen qui
through. C. J. seems
the trade be made wit
gham. There is pro
tion lee isa little slow
Robert a sbo apparen
fled ae lie ears that b
able cash and a n . .
calf almost stock en
small r ncb,
The 1 nnual meeting
officers for our League
nesday evening the 265
estly Requested that
members be resent as
Society 'largely depend
ion of'offlcers. Rev. fid
we trust that the Chur
immediate steps to ha
carry the water fro, t
is danger of inandatio
that the foundation w'
,
1
•
e
•
i
of die late
tor's care.
Wagner
in onr Band.
urned afters long
ds, accompanied by
of Women's Auxil•
the atternocneer•
s 5.
• Harbrou have Tee-
!ding
ea!ding an addition
sweeties with his
•
1f
North Toronto.
Jam Childs of Eglinton has dice of
bin yea eter stallion Haltoneer, which ,.•k
first pr ea at the Toronto show for 1400
Con . rination service at Christ Obu ch,
Deer Park, has been arrange, for Wed es -
day evening, the 26th inst.
Ther weekly meeting of the Bpwo
League of Christian Endeavor of Davis
Methodist Chnroh was held lest night, . d
under the chairmanship of the pastor, ' v:
E. A. Pearson, the annual election of o ' c-
ars of that body took place. Those oh t' n
were: President, J.0. Rutherford; first co-
president, C. Bonniek; second, rice- . • ' id
nit, Idles Alice Davis; third'yioe-pr $ d-nt,
MissL.V. ,Lewis; fourth vice-ppreaid -+• t,
Mies A inie Whaley; treasurer, Miss G. o
Cras; secretary, H. Holden; organist, • iss
L. Bonnick; librarian, A. Duncan.
Bowmsnville.
fe Bird. for over sixteen yeas G. T.
'day operator at Whitby Junction, bas
transferred to Bowmauville.
Died. In Darlington, April 14th. Ms
Woods. beloved ,wife of Samuel Woo
aged 68 years.
Rev. A. E. Harding bas accepted the
of Trinity church to become acting pas
and expects to enter upon hie duties M
1st.
The first steamship t0 be despacbed fro
Montreal to Europe this year will 1* t
8.8. Dominion of the Dominion Line to s
on Saturday, 29th April.
Miss Aida, Sylvester daughter of
Richard Sylvester, Lindsay, has oomme
ed a term of studies at Lorretto Ab
Toronto. .
Thos. Wilken Hunt who died in P
Hope, April 10th aged 85 years, fo• me
carried on business in this town, be
Mayor for several years.
Messrs Geo. Wilson, Port Hope, Ss
Staples, Davao, and Thos. Graham.
vers, have been appointed License Co
Waiters for East Durham for the out
year. -
David Irwin, Cartwright, was in t
Monday and bought a steamship t
for freleod. He will sail op the spl
steamer N amidian sailing from Mon
May 611.
License Commissioners for West Da
have been reappointed --Henry Midd
Robert Philp and Peter Worry. Ile
to consider all applioetions for lioen
been Whir Friday, April 21st, in the
ail chamber, Bowmanville.
lee
1
, i
farm 0
cBriea.
stook from
r being paw
s vicinity.
veterinary,
eptly requi
1 with the pa
•
by
rock-
! ased
B.
and
lents
,
Miss Jennie
as of our League
: last their efforts
to Joseph Molrien
Tuesday for S em
ased y ung man
d his early de ise
a large num of
1
r
• ....-----:_
Pickering Council. -
The ibove council met pursuant
Journnnent on Monday, April 171h,
the town hall. Brougham. Mem
present, Reeve Barnes in the chair.
Glee of lass meeting read and sppro
A number of accounts from d
parties were heard and referred
various standing oommittees.
A number of petitions were -
testing for grants and the same were
over for next meeting.
Mr Underhill, as chairman of the
tingeut committee, secured the
the following a000nate : W J Clar
printing and advertising, $6.26; F H
s
on, inspecting trees 2 days in 1898,
Mr Richards, as chairman, for the
killed by dogs, presented and
through the following accounts :
Nowlan for three sheep killed by dog
ed at $9 each, 118-00, said amount
two thirds sworn value.
Mr Poacher, as chairman, smut
passage of the following accounts :
Catherwood for 4 wks board to Jsm
bard at $2 per week, 18.00; Dr 'fan
for five official visite and medicine
Bums.terick, #2.50; 1,1 Gleeson fo
supplied Mrs f'armiogham as Iter o
this council, i3 00; Mrs John Co
wood supplied Jarnes Hubbard in
of l898, 14.00.
The committee reeomninnded th
the premises formerly occupied by
Nerd bas been put in a good
son be may return thereto
it will make bias similar gr
granted him in 1808.
MrBeare, aa chairman, seonred
sage of the following accounts un
bead of road and bridge committee
James Nowlan for putting in
two culverts on Altons road in
11.60; Wr Morrish for 4 days work
line beiween lots 10 and 11 in B 1?`
h hie black trading
frequently driMring
o be satisfied with
R. Beattie, of Biron-
bly one slight objjec-
to start something
ly more than set's -
received consider -
of hogs and a
ugh to start up a
Ed. Dewey has bee
*a as Pontaitilla, le
for the eleetiou of
ill be held on Wed
inst. It is earn -
full attendance ef
the success of the
on the proper e
Lars P
b officials will
e a drain put in
e furnace as
and it is also f
be iajurod.
offered the posi
r at Lindsay.
rmerly of Seat
ide
to
eir
•
Hub
condi
coonr
Deo. 1899, 13; Job+) King for ro ' -
•ert at south end of sideline bat
32 and 88 in the 6th oon, 11.00; W.
for 20 feat 12 inch concrete pips i7
drawing pipe and gravel and pu
ulvert on div 71, 18.60; John Cre
elf toiee stone on Kingston road
unbarton, 11.46; 13 Hilts for
wer on Whitevale hill 11 00.
We recommend the applieeiio
olpbin for repairs 50 road opp lot
n 6. be considered at time of nig
bastions for repairs to roads and.
We &leo recommend that the app
f Alvin Hastiugs'and James Bogl
to sideroad ,Ietween4ote 20
, be attended to by Mears : Por
are by leaving such repairs th
bey think-necessar .
We reoommend that the followi
tions be held over for oonsiderati
eking the applications, vie :
odd, Wesley Harvey, W J 1)a!e,
grdou, Charles Hodgson and E
aWe
We recommend that the clerk n
k that we require the greater
imber at ooce, but will grant
ears extension of time for the co
f .contract.
in•Mr Richards, seconded by Mr U
ovee that the reeve grant his ord
reasurer in favor of the parties
triended in the reports of the vario
ing committees as presented this d
Mr Underhill, seconded by Mr
moves that the assessment roll for
1899 be and the %same is hereby
end that the reeve grant his order
treat firer for the payment of the
sale y as per by-law, namely the
114
On
r Poacher, seconded by Mr
Mo • es that the reeve and clerk is
oat orized to make enquiry of our
On • ning the Wean* of money
ob oil from the Pickering Harbor
the they instruct our solicitor to
pro release .ane proesed to
bid !ace now due and payable b
of Picket
Under
O that t nes
„
e
11
r,
y
11
iiew stock of Timothy Clover
and Alsike just received
which we arc selling
aft the lowest
prices.
e
i1
r.
c -
y.
rt
ly
ng
an-
rni-
ent
WD
aket
ndid
real
ham
'ton,
tine
nus
i,
un•
Brent
the
ted
held
.on.
of
, for
tobi•
14.00,
sheep
ked
Junes
, vele-
being
the
Thos
Hub -
bison
o Mrs
goods
der of
an for
amen
t after
James
anitary
nd the
n ts to
e pag-
er the
es in
th con
on side.
in
g' aril.
• lbti
Devitt
00, and
ting in
ton for
east of
PtsB
of W
14 on
'ap.
brides.
'cations
for re-
d 214160
er and
eta as
g apeli-
n until
` !chard
Henry
Arrow-
1iiy Mr
part of
e three
pletion
derbill,
on the
recotn•
a stand.
chards,
Ise year
eoeived
on the
or's
um of
chards,
hereby
•-' )ichor
ue this
., and
polea
collect
d oom-
e town -
1
ace Cu
oa-A
>z^
•
mils
Victoria,
,.,...•1•,.,,
�.4
l„:, ._
We a flow showing the rgest and beet variety
of L Curtains ever brought to the town. New --
est de iglu and superior finish. Prices to suit
every ody.. 25c, 40c, 50e, 75c, $1.00 and up to
$8.00 per pair. Every lady should see our Lace
Curtains.
Wall Pa
oloommome
v
ers
In •h
secul
are i
in fit
yard!
1
uslins we -have a very Iarge mock, having
ed a job lot below the regular prices. We
i a position to give the public special values
e Lawn Muslins, every width, from IOc per,
to 25c, extra fine.
We leave, as ns-val, a Targe stock of Wall Papers-,
Cei ing Papers and Borders. We have the latest'
des gns. Come and have a look at our sample
boa s, soine very fine gilts, embossed, and ingrains
AUS Wool and Union Carpets, full yard wide, coin -
me s oing at 25c per yard. We have some good
val es and choice patterns.- Hemp stair carpets
at 8c. Bring size of rooms and we will cut and
m tch our carpets and oilcloths,,
u
We intend
Clothing trade
assortment,
suits and pant
i
enter large!
and have al
h more coni
IINT
into
eady
g, of
oe�
We have just received a largo
and well assorted stock of
Boots and Shoes tor
spring and euw•
mer wear.
the Ready Made
on band a gook
Meuse and Boy's
'i,
We bane Men's 6uitlg at $3,501
but would particularly men-
tion
en tion those at b6M0 and $7.00..
▪ 11 ilr
1,046
ea eller rti
L41 4‘
I Car
Pickering au
paBlimeftealedoldi
Flour, Bran
ground
Bevies
• totneeati !wohrothmt
lbs. 411
t wili dpituty my
Sbemr
Corn Ch
•
All bu
March 2let,
•
ersignee wish
surrounding
eetioa with hi
1 kinds of e
ad Sborts
saved no trou
department, I
favor the wit
'hop reeeiv
ng an entir
Fleur, 113 80
All cue
Cam II
arrive
cial Notice I.'.
to intimiste to artners sea general page of'
*try, that he has opersed ep e. Custom Depart -
mill, in charge ot Mr. W. H. Elviss, late of the
after the 1st Day of March. 1899, will be pre --
1111 WOrk, including chopping and exchanging
wheat. Wheat exchanged and Chop
:you wait.
le end expense in floCUTitig beafpassiblirequip--
eel satisfied I can give the very best of satisfaction
a call. Rates for chopping, 5e. per 100' •
tat Mill weighed in and out.
v new departure in my system of wheat exehati0.
r ton.
jumbo Flour, 1118 00 per UM:
at my mill will continue. as in the past. strictlr
mere promptly end oheerfully &flouted to.
•
For S
ouse- leamn
01
All Dog designs, not a sine. lisfyear's
Moot beautiful goods from 4 cants per roll up..
Wombs, II
Unto. Oi
system gives you