HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1909-03-26, Page 7LESSON Xfl I,—MARCH 28, 1909.
Temperance Lessor.—Prov. 23: 29-35.
Commentary,—T.. Strong drink des -
treys happiness (vs, 29, 30). 29. Who
--Every man Is asked to search into
the cause of the discs:•esti and conten-
tion which exist iu the world. Hath woe,
.—Direful distress. The drunkard has
:woes of body and woes of mind; woes
in himself, woes in his family; pains,
diseases, poverty, and all without al-
leviation. 'Who Bath. sorrow The Heb-
rew word means, first, poverty, and
tb•en misery. The drunkard has sorrow
of his own making. Who hath eonten-
tions—Nine-tenths of all the brawls and
fights, quarrels and misunderstandings
are traceable to drink. The passions are
inflamed and the restraints of the cou-
science and will are removed. Who hurli
babbling—This refers to the tendency
of strong drink to foolish and incessant
talking, vile conversation and noisy de-
monstrations. The man under the in-
fluence of liquor is bereft of lii.s reason
and talks and acts like a foolish man;
he often has the appeara�nce of a veri-
table idiot. Wounds without cause —
The drunken span is eeposod to dangers
and accidents which might have been
easily prevented. He becomes involved
in disputes and brawls causing wounds
whieh are all unnecessary. Redness of
eyes—Bloodshot, blurred or bleared
eyes. "Alcohol induces a paralysis of
the nerves controlling the )minute blood
vessels, the capillaries, which results
in a dilation that speedily shows itself
in the eye. In his step and in his eye
the drunkard shows the secret of his
sin.' —Wakefield.
30. They that tarry long—This ans-
wers the above question.. He who be-
gins to drink continues to drink, tarry-
ing often a whole night:, and frosn that
to day and eight. They that go—Rob-
inson calls this lesson the drunkard's
looking -glass, set before those whose
face is toward the drunkard's habits, so
that they may see what they 'will be if
they go on. Sin of all kinds brings its
own punishment, but there is no sin
'which so speedily and relentlessly pur-
sues its victim as the sin of drunken-
ness. Mixed wine—Modern methods of
poisonous adulteration have greatly in-
- creased the evil effects of liquor` drink
ung. The Sunday -school Journal tells
as that "the chemical analysis of the
liquors used by the people iu this coun-
try shows that they drink alcohol, ars-
enic, alum, aloes, bitter almonds, blood,
t,haik, cherry -laurel, coculus, indicus,
copperas, gypstun, henbane, isinglass,
lime,, lead, logwood, nun vomica, opium,
oil of vitriol, oil of juniper, oil of tur-
pentine, tobacco, sugar of lead, resin,
etc.,,
IL
.A. warning against strong drink
(vs. 31. 32),
:3I Look not—This prohibits even
moderate drinking. It is our duty to
avoid temptation. (see Prov. 4, 14, 15).
'Te person who enters into temptation
is almost certain to fall. Red—Tire
bright color of the wine gives• it an at -
'tractive look. IIis color in the cup—
Literally, "its eye, the clear brightness,
or the beaded bubbles, on wtlrich the
wine -drinker looks with pleasure." (oeth
down smoothly", (R. \t.) "This verse
pictures the atttaetive side of wine, when
it seems perfectly harmless to sip a lit-
tle, when it is bright and inspiring, thrill-
t}ng the nerves with delight, promising all
joy and freedom. It is The shining 'ride
of evil that is so daugerous—this flow-
ery entrance to the path that leads to
death." At such a time, bewarel
32. At 'the last it liiteth—lt is poison
in the veins and wises 'disease and death.
6 int
Coughs, Col
No doctor: attempts to -day to cure a genuine ease of es awls or, h 00 lytta ex,
cent by the inhalation method. Stomach dosing has been dta4,arded'Unitise us'Jeas
•-medicine so taken affects only the stomach --never reunites be seed 0l eatarrh..
The advanced physk:an recognizes that oeIy air cure can be, stent into tbo
lung's end bronebiat tubes. rill this air with healing ruedieamen.ts soli Ych salve
the nrablem. �1
No combination of antiseptics Its 60 successful as Catarrhozone,' tnirAits
the richest pine, balsams, and the greatest healers known
One breath of Catarrhozone instantly circulates Oyer• the
area thatis afflicted with Catarrh. Relief .l1i n°' a:3 tntf-
lering stops at once—germs are destroyed•-eVer taint tan -d,a
ease removed. Thin!; it over seriously. neve, is •1, remedy
that clears the throat- relieves ho..•seness, coughing and bad
breath. Irritating phlegm is .Cleared Pm, 1itflsian2.'^d' = !nrh+n1.
tubes are healed. throat and 'voice are a a trelirl2)4erle')., ween
Catarrhoaone is so Pleasant and ttertain isn't it fodils.`, to
hamper with dangerous Internal remedies? You:' breathe Cr_-
tsrrhdzone—you doe': tape ).t Large MO FS guar: t. t•eri.
,mal, size, ois all dealers, or N. C. Poison & Co. hbagesei, fin.:
CA 1 A R • ZO. E
PRACTICAL AL APJ'l I(AATION.S.
Wine -Drinking,
Just Breathe it t
of the sea would be to instantly perish.
Top of a mast—To .fall asleep clasping
the masthead could not but result dis-
astrously. So the drunkard is utterly
r'oeardless of life. :35 Have stricken..
T. The results. 1."tiV ere'' ('v., 2:11 \\ in-
clrinkiug brings the woe of (1) ill health.
t poisons the blond and sap' the con-
stitution, and spreads the foulest clic
not hurt (R. 'IVO—With conscience sear- j rases. (_) Poverty', ea indislluses sun
Market Reports
The Week.
1
TORONTO MARKETS.
FA TIMRS' MA ILK Kr.
The offering of grain to -day were
mall, and prices firm. Ote loud of hill
wheat, ,ole at $I.04 p: r lm ii 1. 900 bu,h-
e1h of barley at 04 to G(k., :tart 1041 bush-
els of oats: at 51c'.
Bay in fair t,tpply, with pries un-
cls..ngeil ; 85 loads, seald at ff12 to I $13.50 a
ton for No. 1, and• at $10 to All for
mixed. Strafe cosier, tee Lead's 8:l1,ing
;it .$'1.2 to $13 a ton.
J)reanrd lungs are firm el $P,40 to $9.50
for 'heavy, irnd et 19.0 to See75 for light.
Wheat, fall, bush .. .. , .S i 07 $ 1 08
1 04
O 00
:lit}
O 72
l)o•. goose, bneh . , ... , 1 03
Oats. bush . 0 e1
llarley, beide .. .. .. u 114
Rye. built .. .. .. .... a 71
Nee. hush .. .. .... 0 1'2
Buckwheat. bush
.11a,y, per tell! .. .. .... 12 00
Do., No. 2.. .... .... . 1.: (u)
:straw, per tan .. .. .. 12 0(1
Dies etel hogs,.. it els
Rutter, eiuiiee. chirp .... 0 24
De.. inferior . .. . • 0.1s
° Egfee. n{ -w itti.l .. .. 9 `24
('ilicl:er.-. dressed. lb.. .. a 17
Fowl. lb 0 13
Turkeys, 111 0 24
('a14,a¢., barrel.. .... 2 t3,1
Celery par dost' .. .. 0 40
Potatoes. bag .. .. .. 0 75
Onions. t,:.g .. tl 75
hurl.•' . 11.ta•rel .. .. ., an
cal and self-respect gone, the drunkardthrough the stre•ete of Chieaeo (nerving ' ! unfits for industry. An. army of eighBeef lenditteirtihe se 10
him blush with :Settle. Because he did
a. banner ineeribed "Give ohm ehildren .• h
rot feel the hurt; of ltis wounds he cares
not for the scars. He thinks himself
fortunate to be saved from the sense
of pain, feeling no alarm for his u.nfeel-
Mg soul. Have beaten -felt it not—
Angry companious have done their
worst to eud My life, sags he, but their
blows did uot. affect me. Will seek....
again—Rather. when I awake I will
seek it ag•ain. instead of turniug to
God for mercy, he returns to the sal-
oon for more of the poison that has
brought him thus far on the way to
ruin. Self-control is gone. Thed runk-
ard is a slave to appetite. He is insen-
sible to the pleadings a,ncl warnings of
those who seek his salvation. "The vic-
tims of intemperauce will trample over
everything to reach :•;troug drink. Put
wife end children in the path before
them, and they eaet them aside. Put
respectability and honor aud manh.00cl
there; thee,- gaze at thent a moment and
fling theta away. Bring Christ and sal-
vation and heaven to withstand their
downward way, and they trample therm
under their feet. Lay remorse, with.
all its coiling, serpent tongues and
scorpion stings in tlm path., and yet
they walk on. Pile up miseries, sor-
rows, painis, diseases, before them; yea,
point out in the way the ghastly form
of death, and they still go on for they
will have rum." Olt, the power of an
evil habit. It hotels a man in an iron
grip and drags him down to hell. And
yet this evil habit can be overcome;
Jesus Christ is able to break its pow-
-
boasts of the things which should make 1 teen hundred. workir;gsien =relied
Its only beauty is when it 'sparkles in
the cup. Added—ln the Geneva Bible
this word is translated "cookatrice," 1t
was a very venon#ons serpent. But the
picture cannot be overdrawn. The rune
of strong drink is w ors•e than tate bite of
as thousand serpents. Note sone of its
evils: It causes loss of time, of talent,
of purity, of a clear conscience, of self-
respeet, of hotter, of religion, of the soul.
It injures the family, obstructs business,
arrests industry, impedes progress, de-
ranges plans, estranges pa.rtfiers, lowers
(personal standing, debauches pobtess.
wastes the body, disables the mend, un-
fits for the daily duties of life, brings
poverty, tempts others, leads into betel
eompany, causes crime. It fills poor-
houses, penitentiatlies, and. the r gioms of
the lost.
1(1. Strong driahk ruins ek'laxaeter (v.
33). •
31 Eyes shall behold, ete.—"Thine eyes
Miall behold strange things."—R. V.
Some think there is a reference here to
the delirium tremens, But the renderiug
in the Authorised Version, whieh is re-
tained in the margin of the Revised Ver-
sion, is, eeenrdiug to the Cambridge
jl3vlrle, `'{n keeping with the usage of the
word in the book of Proverbs, and with
'the undoubted connection between ex-
cess of wine and lust." The "lust of the.
eyes" cause's the downfall of many. We
alecke hasten to close our eyes to that
• r hich we ought not to dee . Bee, t
e litter—\\'+lien mien or women indulge in
: the use of strong drink they let down
entre bars to every sin that follows! in
'thetrain. The heart is the centre of life,
i and front it spring all evil desires. In a
:state of drunkenness men utter things
,out of reason and contrary to decency,
II'Ulrhen a. Mat is under the influence of li-
quorhis ohmmeter is bad and he be-
tha.ves badly., Alcohol snakes criminals.
A large per sent, of the insnstes of our
.petal anstr'tutions are there throngh the
I.etfeots of rum.
TV. Strong drink leads to folly (vs,
84, 35).
3e. In the midst of the sea•—i drunk-
en man puts himself in the greatest
dangers and then fancies that he is se-
sedre. To make one's bed in the waves
bread," They went out to. a pknie gar-
den and drank forty kegs of beer. If the
poor people would put away the beer
and the idleness which beer•drinkiitg in-
ducec, there would be bread enough for
1)0., ehoiet. caresses,
Da., ni"diurn, c..ret..•:= S0
Mutton. per ewe .. ...... v (,t
Veal. mina-. pe: .•let.. .. l0 tit
Lamb. per r•tvt.. .. .. .. Tet 0 t
"Look Opt For
Mal Little NV
The wise physician says "cure
it ,tore it grows large and mala-
gerouuS, TO -day is the time to
commence treatment," The
remedy, the best one, which doc-
tors say surpasses all others, is •
Nervilin:e. Rub it on the
ell('ht and throat, use it as a
gargle and then take 20 d.r'ops
in !lot water -Cold 1611 disap-
pear.
-Lao. Ft,r r r„ 1 taught a severe colt{."
writes George S ;mart, ct Oibson P. 0.
"Leery cough rasped any throat, whleh
Lc,.•:•me perfectly raw. 11-ilen almost in
d,a.ne .!thou I was advised to try* Nerviline.
i rubbed it on and used it es a gar,le.
1,i mcdiute relief followed. Icor breaking
tt (.olds it's the great remody of to -day.
U til; Use recNervilifne/9
�i3001
•
11 (tG I Cures. Colds
75
0 901
(I
eel
O 20 1
11 l0
I
t i
21' I
:, () 1 BRADSTR.EE t�'S TRADE REVIEW
t: t,+1 ! Monte( al- s e a nt; bstciuess holds fair-
(: s; iy aiearlr hut there he hien as yet lit -
0 85I Cir i,tt•,,•tt'e in volume. Retail trade is.
• t'e 1 Ott the thelit side, hat t t.dee:tiers inn :est.
10 00 ` nim' 1 ,,r: tee- it r ,!kts ere sen7.n;f
i '.auau:a of •,rders. The si
oerv,line sena sttreree •t 1u. It's °hi
).t t household remedy for toughs, colli-.
sure Cass' croup, and internal pains of
i .al's kind. Large bertle•, have been std
by ;,1) dealris for nearly tfty yrai ut
l;on'
forget tirrvinne ztir.en yo: ;r
to :110 L11113,, ot8.
tea -
1 ;1;1'1::
,ry good: i; al„nil a, Itint:I:ea s.7 °°1I) et t `"i. eineh .:: Cee a ilt t1:,lr1tin � r, c ce:t,l nl.til prntg regi11 tits1 •en, ort„ It is nut:• . 'en that thethe t•hild•een. (3) Socta,l t:ontempt. Lt 1 "laetrtt ,, b,ot r a 1air vutua ,r
ti”
:rangers loathe the drunkard, his com-
rades
(,-AR elAlllhh'1'. , o t :ew„• although individual ordoi•t
jeer hist. his neighbors despise him; ~t. 1.4 \\T01100 su,:at's net t3114.1,,,1 0,: f;,1 . Wcre IT no nrl'an, large.
his wife dreads hiss. his, ehi}dren slntn Ione: ur:etlnla'iot. *4.7') ut•r i'wt.. in bur- j 'i .,.t.0-7'l:tde here bee he:d fairer
bila, and at last even the sateen -keeper
1 sets. anti No. 1 golden. $4.30 per eel.. in I ,i.•:,.1} +!meret the ra.t wet'::. and there.-
barrel. These mile, te•r alive,, I at, ler-:ii 8111111. further .elirit1. innprove-
hert•. Car tote. Se lies. In 1011-i:e be?;.:e i went in ti:e ntnulrer of orders ;or ivhoi'-
mite's are ee hes I seit lines. Retail hushzess is moderate
Temperance Iustruetion—The last few
years have witnessed great advances in
the knowledge of the effeots of alcohol
upon the human body. Extensive scien-
tific experiments have been made by
specialists, notably by Professor Iirae-
pelin, of Heidelberg, Germany, show-
ing collelnsircly the vitiating effects
of alcohol upon the special senses, the
muscles, the powers of endurance, and
the ability to resist disease. Hraepelin
made over two thousand experiments
to determine the effects of alcohol upon
the senses. He found that letters which
could be read with a normal vision at
a distance of thirty feet had to be
brought ten feet nearer to bo distin-
guished half an hour after the subject
had taken an ounce of alcohol. The ef-
fect on colors was equally narked. They
were either obscured or lost altogether.
This is one chief reason why railroad
engineers must be free from alcohol. If
they are not, it greatly reduces their
ability to discriminate between colored
signals. The effect of liquo{: on hearing
was even more noticseable. A watch tick,
ordinarily heard distlectly at a distance
of thirty or forty inches, was percep-
tible only when within ten or fifteen
inches after one ounce of alcohol was
consumed. The sensation of taste was
changed. Bitters, salts or acids mixed
with other substauces could not be de-
tected until increased from a third to
a half beyond the proportion easily dis-
tinguished -by a normal person. The
power to discriminate odors was weak-
ened, and the sense of touch greatly
diminished. I'it•aep<:lin also found that
small quantities of alcohol weakened
muscular power and activity.
The powers of endurance are greatly
lessened by alcohol. This has long been
recognized by Arctic explorers, sports-
men and those engaged in endurance
feats. A brief spurt may be made by
one ander the influence of liquor, but
he. is sure to fall far behind at the fin-
ish. Felipe is caused by the accumu-
lation of efeste in the blood more rapidly
than it can be sent .out of the system,
Alcohol hastens fatigue by clogging the
blood with poisonous matter. Practi-
cally ail athletes abstain from drink, at
least during training. When the Great
\\%ectern hallway. Company had. its gauge
narrowed the men were worked seven-
teen and eighteen hours a day. Five
thousand men were employed, who fin-
ished the huge task ie thirty •ogle !hours.
Not a drop of alcohol Ives allowed, but
the then were supplied freely with oat-
meal and water. .Endurance tests have
been made with abstaining and non -ab-
staining soldiers and workmen as well as
with men who tested their strength with
instruments of precision, always with the
sante results --1,3. T,. 0.
who caused' his ruin will throw hien into
the streets. (4) Resnorge.. When of in-
toxicated the drunkard. suffers planing
pain and awful anemish as he realize= his
miserable folly and real guilt. (5) Die-
graee. The habits 'Of the drunkard, affect
hie looks. The inflamed eyes. the reit
OTHER MARKETS.
h,•t1. here 11101 in the 001111try and ,•o,-
VtFY3Lsf1 frill i�iLl:L II'etiotts are 11') better that fair. 13tr
MONTREAL LIVE shIliteh rood, imie.s report that orders tire
-Mem 43:'1 h. e,' „f 1.u1. n • tie, tuor:ly 1'n' small parcel, but that they
blotched, disff�ntti'd fleet are an index or 45 ntil:•h rimy aur plat, , r-. Lisa huh-, :.r:' fairly uutnerntt-. The millineri-
Charartei 1 .i.i she,p and haute. t, i eh; lees- , fre,tr 1 i•• Reil up to expcc•t,ttions. nava-
2 "Sorrowh (v. 20). Wine -drinking
turns men into beasts: it males :vires
widows, and ehildren "fatherless; it robs
helpless infaney of, foed and elothing.
There is no sorrow that pen caa picture
so dark, so )seal tehMeakin;;, as that which
wine -drinking brinas.
3. "Contentions" (v. 29,1 O.1•, Satur-
day evening a company o 4•'s .t work-
men went to a tatexn, and p.i•' i es them
looney: together bought"hI 1 +,d'. Wide
-
key a.utl dram.. ith,On +'r fens t ;'.'home
four of them begesneto gsisrrel, whieh.
ended in a fight. Testi were killed. and
the murderers were seutentnnl to prison
for fifteen years.
4. Detrnet'ion. "At the last it bitetls
were after& 1 for hue et g: • i:t t I:•'(i hers business i, he:ellen llen opening teat
Abe/heir tir this forenoon. I..i•. .1, e0 1l 1• :tee the ululith't sill .tents .e expeeted'
were skew, with rather ',weer {dice.,: t 1r, s Itr:ll y, t'.':s t- and u.l, ns•), nleet-
caive's 011111 hog- We're Cil-•, lou t - 1:01 ) i:ig n 101t'ly hrl••„ ,letuanti. Pri'' s are
''btaell ‘011.1:11,1e
r- tic4a :11,1 1 '•et , hit•': 1)1 i eent'rttlly 1 t h t,,:?.ta heed.
prise.. !'rime oe : ves she a t ., t , 5 1•:, i ` \Vilnlip: g (i, to the i resent tele
rents per pound, hat they n:ve 11:4 eN- u•i:uletale 8‘ri;lit,: rr.atit'• 1::08 kept up vera
tae:t; per t'ty acus! :r ail i . , s eh at 4 1 t :1:: { nen. and rot elb't: t• swathe are healing fon
conerno l ,tort:, 2 3'4 to ne.:t 4'p'r Ib; { ward for spring and uwuner lines,
t:ttives yell<1 lit frc,rtl >e_ 'r,et ., (•t ), all III \niicolrier and \'}coria -'!Tyre Is a
8 to t near tic per lit. :\lileh colt; aahi at it
healthy tone to all }ins; of trade along
Fila -to ;.i:1 t acb. 5 tee z "ld ,tt ::bout ' 1
1 t t to 00 ,e4.
4l -9e !:sun:„ at about se ja 1b:_ (;ao41 1 tll.ehr... Fine weather is stimnlating
lots of felt hog, sold at ;-1••l ter 7o ' j trade, the lalt+•r i, rep+irt^,1 stead•'y hit-
l1e). els'11 pittvint anti tett! tntthiol, ettlltilttie, ohe''r-
litli'I'lell CATTLE'11:A13K.ehrh.
!. u!.
indica sallies for ,;Pell. tn. '-1e.oly. ! Iln'niltott •13118;11e;a 10t•e enntinues
like a. serpent, and seta; sits like on act-
at 113 "-1 to 1 1 1 • ie per peen,i. d o- } 1 heir e 10 ne arty all lines. U iiile the ind{-
y w'ei "hi ; 1';•11ah,,, at:rr ese: i, gunnel 1 ; tat itlltts for - J1111,t-' trade 71: ,good, the
der (v, 32.) This is the end. At the whiff to li ri lir. ; 1,:!y::)O It 1. 01 t,tlecal0 is limited. ('oil:tc-
first it epn.rkies and 01300153 at' the last 1 , . , .
it p0isens and inttddene. .At the first it NEW Yt1RK St•t Alt yl )t KEr. tin)?a are :t)vnit fair. Level Industrie%
' 1 '• 4•.l ) 1 111 h" Irl more at tts-
centi tufi.el, n" ie- ,'1 nr to c i:y, ltut '.t Itt;t:tl of 'prlig is wanted
sugar, .l;r 1.1-:,.r) tela:, .r ,,l,tt Ott )! ,?11g 1' a a. tt:1p to trade
\ 1\\I1'la; \`:III:a'1' 1i:(Ci�1:9. 1 1 .r, t'i ttr;t tree,. ie q,t3et, Pre-
. 11- , ''.1,3 I t s e t' e f deli' well a n d
behold strange women" tt'. ilii.) eA, loan ,.1.!"...3.t 1$11j°,1-1':".1,1,'''1, ..s . l .
l.lt,I „ lay 11u. 1.r -1,""l''1'"1 :ride !fere is tet lu•e-
under the influence of }atoll u)ts . is t hie.11:,rc•,1 t . it 1, \i,t, •1:f:: (c :':•l,
easily' t.uupt eti. With judgment c1011(11,:::!..:,:t.ir. (t - lr ;t sd there i, Ii11 ra
home*, Whol, if:Anse:T. two ,..:,,,,.1,:.1
t,Wt;,'.S t,lutin;x nrdersa
season dethroned. mentor T one and pas- tt:.s 1, e ; ,
ior& inflamed, he reels ready for ably, .\ good R'en't meat a; 1 i. • .. r - sweet's,
crime.
ee, ,,;tele.{ tet. ire•• ,tae+ au•:r• ` t I:. ell TIP' 1,011;1151M of trails la
0. Insensibility. `Thou -halt be as be i'""1"" All t tn- e 1J,t ..: t•lgt '• t... ehy 0.11 1 r ct eery,
is the grateful stimulus of an hour: at •n"01r• 1Gt.1 fmi.• seen• • l , 1 :;:. t itt;'.l tt -.tt -',i v
the last it is the, !worm that newer cies,
and the fire that never shall be.queneh-
5. l.ieentiousnets. "Fl1in0 eye-1'shall .l 1 1 t,,.ce .43 o 1, t
11" -•7,i8;'°1
,.fa 1:,:.1 �:,ir,1 .tna,lt•-
that lietlt down in the midst Of the sea,
or ttS Ise that Neill untie the top of a
tea=_t" (v. 84.) A seaman wide :!wake
does not find it easy to hold on to the
mnstheadin a gale; lent to attempt to
sleep there ie sure suicicl'. Many a young
man has put himself under the delusive
soreery of ttronee drink, dreaming that
Ile could teaks it or let it alone as he
chose, only to be swiftly hurled:int:o the
drunkarcl's he'll.
H. The remedy. "Look not •t}tort 'upon
the wine when it is reel" (v. 31.) 1)o not
waste one glance upon it. »o not put
yourself in the way of teieptaLtioil, 5'nrn
Jront it as positively as the. little girl.
out driving with hiss \Villard; HMCo salt},
••1\'irked old saloon, '1'1 try .tint ot�en to
look at the barrels:' A persue who fah
]otter: his Bible will be rt total .tbstalnc.r.
"Looking unto ,Tesue, the. author tool
finisher of our faith." is the remedy for
Gerry ill (Ileb. 12, 2.) As the bitten le -
mollies looked to the brate1tselpent, so
the sinner stung. .,by the s'erpeft may'
look up for health' and Jife. Atte of 'etre.
Israelites could look, ]':vett .the weak
ones who could not raise theirheads
could look. A little child bitten by the
serpent can look. so easy has (dud made
the way of salvation.- -A.
*ha
REFUSED PAPERS.
Too Good a Union Matt to Become
a Good Citiheo.
l7anvi}le, 111„ !'larch 22. - Judge
Wright of the federal court has refused
naturalization papers to t' ilfiatu
Strong, of Westville, a member of the
United Mille Workers of Aeterios. When
asked, "If it cisme to the point that the
union and the taw's of the United States
differed, which would you follow?'"
Strong atiswtel'ed, `:The' uni10n, of'eo a; see,
Judge Wright says: 'I ;Can never
grant the right of citizenship in the
United States to any man who follows
the dictates of his .trade (!pion rather
than the laws of our hide
anal •!,ries ere:, fleet!!, gees. tor fit!" '
1110)1lt t. , ti.•.t.y 110, 1. :1 t 011,1 I:110
et'o'•, bred-, ,.i W:ti \.0 'i:•.t., ,i1 i
it large gietit.ite. Ilene tl';t d, lo- w, •.
antro hey 'i- c,; ire--•:r,e,1•. 1oetey'-
salve follow: Xe\t Stt11111 Eales, hello
Fees and Mothers
Suffer With Backache
hales hstured 1, 1 1•2d to 1- tell: ge n- '
5 1.3 tt) lid. (h ewn-1:ul i, esesi theles;
.tourer! it) 1.'2 tt+ 2- 1 1.2' !: _t,,t r a 1.31 c u,# •u r.t
mw t 'ue,l
+ .. t , lending LO
.\11`01•a'I 1. 'tell 11.,11'.,: tttl'8 •y •, 1.1 to lid, i tuna r\,daft reit.
Is 1, 1 1••)11. I:I•ata, . ,.. 111 killer) tet :1 ;,t' 4. tl',1 4 e..dt•tint; fain.
It
to l'. 1.11:1: ;:rr,l'y 8.1 t4, 1- {,L sc,,l(11 ; 3:v lcolutl! ,i• sen Wilh ner-
1\'el.t-\u,#1.11i4 1.1(1) hills..-.rr:1-1 •, 1-t I fn thr a,10+':, histories :nett 0n a.
to 11 1.2'l. '1'4d,na:?I:s, :,'il ealso, _,'' i 1 i faint ale w4:,t;,, aiiiny women. dragged
7 1.4 tlto 1. 4d. New %t:?hrF?,1. 1.a0:1
�,l `.i ;,.rt•a•y •,titer! With ::lel:rhos be eche and thy.
hale }.c.r:tit>.1 ;•1•• u1 1
• n r elnsvu !lain-.
, 301. Cape oi' t;nne1 liol,e !telt )
5 ] . d to Is ap ;'4l 1, 4.1 or 1, ;,I: , t `n, !I •tu•t:'Cin;,' idun palatal, hut it's
Neese 100 Niles: c& u ; ri.tr,s.(1 11', urit:l•C rile t,t ,li'-' t4t 1 1;t,1•
giea-y i 14 to led. trey..
131'S1\LAR I\ \tt)\'.0}i7:A L, 11 dizziness 11 ' 11lnlo, det•atlge l
Grain--' here is eo ebeege in the lo- •, 1101 "05, ?end o,hrr .vrnpt0nt, of kidney
cal oat si 311011on, prices being well male- t' 1(14(1bit etnt'1 ,'airs tlrettlse1 t't, they
tattled tinder a steady :legend. Peas-- : require the xc..istsuee o, 1)r. 1Latnilton s
No. 2 98 t•'3 to Mo.Ot:--Canadian ; one., wheel ge e!:rsL to the seat of -tete
Westeem No. '2,51 to 51 1-2e; extra No. i treetee.
1 feed, 50 1-2 to 51c: No'. 1 feed, 50 to �1. ii
50 1-2c : t li,tario Noel •-,0 1" 50 1 -'lei Ou-
tario No, :3, (11 10 41) 121i; Oiil51 .) No, ,
4, 48 to 48 1-.2c : \o..: barley, 65 to GGo•. i ALLN'S ILLS
Manitotla feed barley, .51) 1-2 to 60e; + I', irr. \h0111 and payer to the
buckwheat, :3 1.2 to )Ge. Flour—The i.in,t41_,, to heel ;lid to fire Madder anti
tone sI tet i aik0t 1, Iain and p11010 .1:o4•r, to If P0' 111011,1 of poss(lns,
show no ch:tiige::\lanttnb: :piing wheat. 1 ttruhttl-).,• l it u•l 1'estlt'd4 so stir.-
mat0uts 1' 1 1 , S:i, 80 to 330: 11 art tab:n ,,, 1'11 i), 11.tnti:t) 1 '4 fills. P'or
r
WILTON'S PILLCURE
S
n:',
spawheat. pateets, se('ondt•, 85.30 to ,„p lt' r 1.1011fii•ltioi their 1r.eiit: re
45.50; ltfiaiitoba strong bakeis'. 8510
to $5.30; winter wheat patents, 85.50
1.0 $5 straight rollers, 85 to $5.10;
well k -owe. . fu•,•• ttruelded for girl: and
\V0.l.011 of ell ages, 95 vent., per box, at
ell dealers. us,:ust• a ly .nbyiitnte for
do., in bags, $:2.35 to $2.45; extra, In 11Jr, ilan into:,'•. Phis of MOudrakc and
bags, 41.95 to 82,05. thetl—The demand i letttlerim t.
for all lines of millfeed continues gond, 1
and the market is active, with a strong i LONG-DISTANCE WIRELESS.
undertone; Manitoba brain, $22; do., 1'i,,-:li11311 1 ), :Hersh 22•- lir en agree -
shorts, 824: (tlt1li° bran. $e23 to 824; imeat. reached. to -day between tiecretery
do., shorts, 824.30 to 425: Ontario mid- 1Ney'er and reheesentetives of au elec-
dliugs, 825 to $95.50; pure grain moult- I ilia signelling company of Pittsburg,
he, em) to 8:15: mixed monillie, 3328 to I the naval t etahlisltulenl. is to be furn-
3330. -Cheese--'l'he market ee ntinites firm ; tilted, under eoutraet., with wireless ap-
wit31 a good enquiry; finest w'et,tel•u, I paint 11S whicli •w1.11 tralit'ntit: messages
13 to 13 1-2e: eastern, 12 1.2 to 1'3 3-4c. for it disi:anee of 3,00)1 mites day or
I3ttt,tel••--The marker. i, firm, with a good ` night, send 1.100 strip, etre to he fm'sisli-
trade passing: frill evemner,, 2$c; w'in- ed with sheiler arquiratt:s capable of
ter (hemline, 21 1.2e; :delete. in (311)5, i s: meting lues -.age; a distance of .1,000
tie; rolls, lee. i gge-There was no I miles.
change i.11 the condition of the market. ':`Iso epp.11 1111:, it is .sept, will be
prides being about :4catly 3111(100 11 g.sod ;thirty 11010, as pow: 1101 sit those in
denterttl net -25 to 20e (1(r tlut.c•tl. 00010ary? use.