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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-04-10, Page 3IK7.`I+"'UNa?I,'1'IONAL JUESSON NO. II. t1VRIia 12, 1003 � The Reaurrection.71 dor, 16:20, 21, 60.58 Commentuary-Arter proving the re"tWr.ec't'10n of Christ from the ftrlp'turess (ver. 1-4) and tram eye- w1tneeses (vs. '5-1`L), IIL%ul offers a Isltron'g argument, J)y showing the re - suits of the contrary doctrine; 1. '~'hie whole gotspel would be a failure and p•reachang and faith vain (v, 14). Thins is clear because, (1), If Christ bias not $leen ra'is•ed from the dead ' He carianort keep Hie promises. 2. He GamIl'ot he a•prersent Saviour -from Mrs. Anderson rolliilletl�' 41`11- S. He cannot be proved to be s I'lle San of God, "It is His power society woman. Of Jacksonville, OMP deattti, HLs continued existence, ��daughter Recorder of Ir living, than $. completes the s g Iroof that He its a divine Saviour." Deeds, West, says: *q4 There has ween no atonement for w'in's. There irau Gie po second coming. "There are but few wives and I. CIlriat's resurzectlon . affirmed, mothers who have not at times en- -vo. 20, 21. lured agonies and such pain as only 10. :Nowt 'its Christ risten-"Paul be- women know of. I wish sueh wtmrea gl'ns this famous chapter with a' knew the value of Lydia E. Pink. W.axs'nafi>ing of edge proors of the ham's Vegetable elompound. it 1•e3,surrection of phris't. He brings is a remarkable medicine, different In witnetss after witness, even x770 at action from any other I ever knew and one tfime, who during the forty days thoroughly reliable. elbween the resurrection « is • kind the 1 have seen eases where women upcension, saw Jesus, touched Him, doctored for years without permanent heard hiin -talk, ate with IIi1n, wall'- benefit who were cured in less than ed with Him alt dirforent times in three months after taking your Vege- various places, and many orf these table Compound, while others who witnesses were familiar acquaint- Were chronic and incurable came out a' i es•cured, happy, and in perfect health 1. By nian"-•It plenued Goll that a a some Fray humanity should with- after a thorough treatment with this medicine. I have never used it myself laitt�+eif, however aided with r:lir•in- without y tty, worl' out i.La own destiny, both gaining great benefit. A few doses restores m for death. and Piro, in Adam and in y strength and Christ." Came deaL-1t:-•Compare Pro- ' appetite, and tones up the entiie mtaals V. 1.2-19 With tine narrative? system. Your medicine has been tried In Gen. ill. By man ...... the resurrec- and found true, hence I fully endorse tion -Mortality came by Adam, im- it-" - Ates- R. A. ANDuRsox, 225 Wash- mortaldty Jay Christ. So sure as all irgton St., Jacksonville, Pla.-g5000 have been subjected to natural Arfelt if orlgrnal of above testimonial proainggenu- death by Adam, so suite, shall alt %neness cannot be produced. !lie raised again by Christ Testas. - The experience and testimony Clal:;ke, of some of tile most noted women II. The incorruptdl le body (vis. ,0- ofAmerica go to prove, beyond 57). 50. Thiiis I sa•y-Th3e, apostda shotes a question, that Lydia Be Pink - clearly that man in his present con- ham's Vegetable Compound wilt dation cannot enter the portals of correct all sucI1 trouble at once eternal glory. 'flesh and blood -Man by removing the cause, and re- ign hftsi present state of infirmity and storing the organs to a healthy decay, with c, b'otly that is fragile and normal condition. , and weak. Cannot inherit-I•Iis na- ture its not eap l)1e, of enduring the - "eternal weight or glory.,' Tn order agined and pressed into service ; but to be able to inhabit rile eternal certainly they never suggested It. mansllons, man must be immortal. Beason, unaided, never dreamed of Kingdom of God -Heaven; appropri- the resurrection. ately called the kil-19 bom because He PRAC".RLCAT. SURVEY. will reign there in undivided and per- fe'Ct glory forever. -Barnes. Neither 'I'lle doctrine of the resurrection doth, etc. -Our , ordinary flash and Of the lx/dy is distinctively a reve- biood its by Its very nature destined Iation of the Bible and Clririetian- bo corruption, It is not Witt' WWII itY• Ilea.then :religion and philoso- fletsh. and blood that we can become phi' cOnta.Ined Intimations of a yparta'keirs of Che incorrupteble life, future life for the spirit, but con- -L'rs• tallied no hint of a reh ttrrectlon w1, 52. A mystery -A truth not for tlto body, I vIlee the doctrine known brfo-e, and evc.n noir ihett of the rc-,,urrectjorl from the dead it is revealed it is too deep for hunta,n acs taught by thfe al)ostlea seemed reason to fathom. lye -That is, the foolisitnrss i:o tir:r hru thea world, whole body of Christians -who are Importance of tile resurrection candidates for the glorious re.surrec- of Christ to the Christian system. tion. The use of the word ,,well Ili The apostle buses his argnmen'tfor this connection sloes not prove, :ts the re'sm,rection of all upon the some seem to think, that the apoertle l+esuireetion of Christ, Incited, {his expected to be alive at the renting i•c the keystone of Christianity. of ~Christ. YOt all asleep. -life shall Blot Out the victory of Christ over not all die. All be changed -Those the grave and the whole eystenl who are alive at the clay of jndg- falls to the ground. The apostle ment shall be changed so that their urges this thought Lit- various Con - bodies will become spiritual boriies siderations. aa) The positive evi- likethe bodies of those who shall be deuce of Clrh•i,st's resurrection from raised from the dead. the dead (vs, P-8), This evidence 53, 54. This corrupilble-The mor- Would be sufficient to establish tal body Is not destroyed au+t again any fact in any just tribunal in created, but it is "clothed upon" he world. (b) He then urges that to with immortality, "It receives an ad- admit Mlle resurrection of Christ is dition of qualities which it did not to admit the possibility of I, resur- possess before," Is written -In Isrtiaih rection for all (-.s', 1:2, 1:3). (c) He axe. S. Swallowed up -Death ishere Cher, argues that if Christ be not porsonifded and represented as a tie- 1 risen preachbng is in vain, faith- is rcureng being, swallowing up all the j vain and lie and otlirrs who preach - generations of men, and by the resur- I ed Christ's power to save were rection of the body and the destruc- false witnesses (vs. 1.1-17). Only a tion of ilia, empire of death, 'God is living Christ can save men. Ile represented as swallowing him lap.- lives, 'therefore He can save (Heb. CIarke. 1'n victory -The victory over vii, 25) (d) 'Then tlrpy also which death and the grave will be com- are fallen .asleep en Chriet are Plots. The changed body will be (1) incorltipttbie, (`,:) •glorious, (8) pow- perished." (v. 113). Their ]tope for erful, (4) a spiritual body, (5) one the future as delusion, their tri - like the bods• of the glorified Christ. ing a fantasy.ithOur hope a meet - like ing again with them a dream. (e) What a time of victory that will be "If In this life Only, we have ho for the rig;hteious ; pe 55-57. Thy sting -Quoted from 1 jn miseChrrable," we are Of all men most Hosea xidl. 11•. :Death is here repre- ated. able," most to be cammiser- sented as harm a stili O $ted. , g g. grave- HOpe through the resurrection of death -The R. V. also transposes the Christ of a resurrectdoa for all His two rhembers of this verse. Sting...... people. "But now is Christ riser!,,' sin -"Death could not Have entered eta. (v. 20). •Cale effect or Christ' a. Into the world is sin had not nn- resurrection upon His discipirs is 11- tered first, and it is sin that has la,,trated in John xx.20. They here armed death with its destroying olrl." Elope force; bb sin, hotly body and soul are ";g1ad when they sags thn L revived, despair fled, faeth reasserted slain." The lave -That which gives i itself and they.were "glad." The joy - sin its polver Is the fact t11nt it is Ithcs tra 3 .,grrlssion of thy: rightcours ou" nOta of v. 20 wlrs eorlstnalily kept before t.h-0 church ln.gv o,: an all-lrlsth and all=holy being, : by the nllostic';. III, The ehureTl ttdttronishcd (v, 8),' (a) rt waA a central t.11ouglit In their , 58. Therefore—Wo come now to 'the iltortill-81111-11.1,1011 tl g� 1'tul'8 IdC, itt wan ' conclusion of this wonderful chapter. Fhi(.h enabled hint to l3tedfast-lie srttled and firm in count all thhrlgl butloin for Christ an;l to (t"111l'e tele; dajly dr•a.Lli of the come (v. 32) arefen endeavoring lovPrl apostolic ministry. (c) In vlery of sep- ( ) v r ng to over- aration by death, believers were move , tl ttivayabeom Lot notlliul; co -i by the IIOp,r, of a resurree- urovo you away from tllit, trope of tioal, at the co)ndng of tilt 1,01•d. (d) the gospel, which Is given unto on.' , y c o t hr~ s: tin is t su 1 t 114gvays abound: tg- �teadfiast "leant' P t' dud to Positive, intrin is firnlltess: nnmove-; Ilya trials, they -vette exhorted to able implies resistal ce to the - glory Ieilt Rurlut :lace it! thv Of the p 1 ml h n glory - I r. 1 i (.1 wl:. . !; 1 was 5 to 1 e t 1 kir:• t h at th , tiesn outward pre:ssttras and fier0c t : appearing of Jesus Christ. (e), Tile onsets„ abounding inealls energetic ; 1,4alliLs are, urged to persevere die tho " action. Work of the Lord- That : Citr• f h•sLiaal r . I wlrixlr the Lord required; ail the du- see by the 11Op+! {e at 'ties of Christians. The conversion of � lits coming EI4 "siaail chatngo our I rAnners and the upbuilding of the vile batty that it stay be fashioned r like unto Ilia glorious body.' Thle, church, Ye, know-Chrls,tla.ns are mi hope has been and is the joy and positive people. They, do not live in t11e inspiration of the church of urlcertai,nty and doubt. Christ to the earth'. Thoughts. -"The one point which Victory in stew of t,hr, resurrection. Ls most distinctly the peculiarity of If in one particular sin and Satan IChx!j -; tan teaching as to the future keep the people of God urn -ter their state is the resurrection of the body,, power, salvation is incomplete. Sin Olt liar, been said that, Christianity must root only be elestroyod but its 9p the only religion which takes ser- consequences as -well, This shall be t onus accounit of the bode, or does it accomplished in Christ, "Tire last any honor, or regard's holiness as I enemy that shall be destroyed is ro.4sibte in aanneetion -vitir it.) It is , death„ (v. 26). Then shall every saint Al a. pure, matter of .revelation, and ' of GOd excl�aem, "O death, -There is % pure questbon of filth. Now that thy Sting? O grave., where, is thy vi0- tile trnt:ll has been announced, var- tory?" (v, 55). Seeing this triumph :oars natural analogees may be .im- from .afar, CTod's people may now. by ., o Wireless n ems , On ,LAtft9'�v to �aciL`3 a d�+0 P.C. of cast C� amour Will Rae', saen't 70'A aware receipt of stoma• naxxKaae �'aam.2 arldzress.. 13e2i 36 2; X11,,H]lt 'LN TEF,?CZ CO., •1110'a�A7irl.nd, 40214•. faith bring it high. Tine exhortation In view. of this hope (v.'58), 110Nv insignificant all earthly hopes compared with 0.1s l How full is this hope of enoOu1•age- menet to endurance. 'Therefore, "be steadfast" -press steadily forward, turning neither to the. right hand not, to the left; "unmovablo"-let no- thing• disturb the sea•enity, 7f spirit, begotten by this hope; "always abounding,' etc. -let this hope inspire you to your best endeavor to glorify Him aaid advance His kingdom who Purchased this ]tope for you ; "for- asmuch as ye know that your labor Is not In vain In the Lord"- tempta-tions to discouragement may arlae, but your reward is not here; when Ile shall appear He shall "reward every man according as his work sholl be." -John S. McGeary- i FIGHTING OFF � ADVANCING AGE. �f CALIFORNIA lVEtllf,'i'si. The repurts matte by the savings to $1.10. bunks of ;Sall 1:'I'aauiSuO recently IYOol-71he marlcet is quiet. with, nlhOw -deposits of $156,817,637. This outside advicos reporting •tn easier It is g•enerillly considered that ,1m- fr,eleng. fleece is, quoted here at all former velars, and represents erican women have increased In vl- , about ;5:180 per capita. _ILe this is unr:l lslipd. Pulieal supers gyre goted tality the last halt' century, and : Ilk -' tills its conspleuons In women over, ltic. forty-five, . '.14110 well -kepi ln.tt"On ' "I£ mg remedies will not do what of 1130;1 i� fuller of figure and much r claim for them, their sale should be brighter of eye than the inutron of 1853. SLe Iters pushed tha age limit prohibited by law.',_1ejLJl' y01,T. about ten -ears, and rete call inake "I have had I?teumatism for �a number tkat ten twenty. The first „tepinnnt of vears and suffered with pains in m p y be to take account Stock of one's health anti Il-:rr4tjty; . them find joints a ] great• deal, and shooting pains ,soave +:peettl work to do, and do It.' all through my body. I procured a If you have not a profession, have salnple vial of 'lZun!ron's Rheumatism •r a f u ]t ho b •, h.na . ia. 'a wan who o t b T �• tit gv b 3 Cure aL the free dt ta•jbut.ion and 1 am di,5e€t,se 1•or years with a strawberry indeed thankful. 1J}- pains have all left pateh, One wamnn • kelit hamuli"(; me, If any other sufferer want -.9 to birds. Those birds added a dozen years to Iter life, get cured of Rheumy d-nl 1 advj=e Munyon's The day when she realizes that Rheumatism Cure;; '—Mrs. John Quick, 102 John street Toronto. shed js' growing old is .a tnt•ning point 1 ' In a woman's life, but the wor.,A ; MTlbli'01�'S REMEDIES. thing she can do is Lo settle clown at theraldtt of t.ira public road kaki- into t of "`nothing -in- I meats o 'sRllCougo re topsand err xIsteree pity nt." Think of the - eo- sconglhis heals nC the lungs. Price Plie p'1e who. at 70 or 75 were in tete full ti+ie of t•igorou� usefulness. Afunyon's KlAney Cure speedily cures ,pains In the back, loins or groin and all The talk about delights of child- terms of kidney d1gease, Price •.5c, hood and youth is nonsense. There Munyon's Headache Cure stop$ headache 0 ouffering then, too, but in age, in three minutes. Price 25c. we find solace in the frulto of ex- 1 •••• IYectFTCFik I}lite-lift;�, perience a,s well. The crowning• FREE MEDICAL ADVICE. betlity of yolitl is thtit it is youth,; Personal letters addressed to Prof. uun- but- if apple and peach trees bloott ed yon, Philadelphia, T'.S A., containing de. all thU year round, what should we tails of sickness, will be answered prompt. do for the fruit ' ly and free advice as to treatment will be "Act well Tour port -there all the given' 2b The intuition of the moral sentiment is an insight of the perfection of the laws of the soul. These laws execute themselves. They are out of time, out of space, and not subject to circumstance. Thus, in the soul of man there is a justice whose retributions are instant and entire. He who does a good deed is instantly ennobled. Ile who does a mean deed is by the action itself contracted. He who puts off impurity thereby puts on purity. If a man is at heart just, then in so far is he God ; the safety of God, the immortality of God, the majesty of God, do enter into that man with justice. ?I * * As we are, so we associate. The good, by affinity, seek the good ; the vile, by affinity, the vile, Thus of their own volition, souls proceed into heaven, into hell. * * * Good is positive. Evil is inerely private, not absolute; it is like cold, which is the privation of heat. All evil is so much death or nonentity. Benevolence is absolute and real. So much benevolence as a man hath, so much life hath he. For all things proceed out of this salve spirit, which is differently ndmed love, justice, temperance, in its dif- ferent applications, just as the ocean receives different nalnes on the several shores which it washes. -Emerson. tonor lies," and on that doilmda C:§.NADA'S 1•,.X'01ITs.Y more than n worn.$' likos to con- ` Canada produces one bushel of oeale. But let us be honest with I ourselves, A p.ieture hat- only mels i where In tlrhettt to he Lworld. Noy bushels te itlstarown nd- a11L&Ition to the •spnnip. Itair, '111" a' Ing tills fact, Canada is by far the pink w.ndst eluf:hatiizeK the faetthat largest exporter, of agricultural hn- ihe apple blossom• tints llavfa rar3ed. elements in the world, her population It iv br..ticr new;iys to look Ilk a beincr taken jn(o considrratlon. Dur - well pre carved ole[ wom:tll than tt Ing the past 1,eteli tears iltc exports noiclt cl�;nngecl ,r'oung wOU1rt11. cf Cnnndiall implements have rracb- '.I'lie, greatest ;rias to life lisp, Pro- ed the vast ectal of trn millions or fuer fool .incl proper exervkp., with doll -ars, Or t•qu:tl to the export of prorer Slerp. A mall of 6•i with the tFventy Million husttrls of wheat steal of. a boy. Sat,l ` i'hr) prier of grown in the great N- prtllwest lit suplllrnrw�s is eternal exerciso.'• The t'Iftr cents per hnahnl. These facts gre'ate'st rnrn,la,q to life: are rnwt , shatl.til certainly o•itabiish Ill tilt anti worry. You combllt rltsL gyeth 11' luill(!R of :ill tliinkdi,"• ra.rnacrs the hobby. and by thy,• we'aloni of lilinlr � excellent Ianli�t ;1lid the ono day, at it time, you li: t -torr r, , q h high relru- which ab'sorlA so much of th) Aul- tlttion wpl,cll art,frt1ClI to all i pie- r made fmlrinut.>hrts. Cnuadiau impie- evicnu Nitnldty. Yon have hr ar.l of l ments etre Pxprirt' -il to every couliLry tit Ola e i •a til tv ai n who ]1;ui tttrrn s.t,. to {.ere n-orl•1 gyitr-rc grain. is growl), of glfl,:;Cs-vl'Jch l;hr, ealled h r ; e•xeept t0 the 1'111tc.l Latey, Thnt «fur orfs. ltet• `'mrdium +" ani h r ' mnriket IS a. I:eallr•3 book t Canadian o ('a n d n •, lit „ )) II 1• 1 h { OUl 5, u + ry h 7,h. 1 „� nh•s tt, r,l to ; tntlilc+mint• munufarturcrs ns gve11 its 110 rel. fine won k:tnd her rrlttliur , lind j to thrs (,11nadian farmer, for hardly w•t nerd the "nid,h took" for-tildwork any of his products find a market of Old age.-M.'rion Hrar l:luil. I tli' 17 , while tlee, P91-etielve Amen-' enn is contp.,ting :111 (,ver til r• world, T itr,lil it and in C'n.nnda, too, for very inch Don't lanow. of ground now c c g In 11 bl- the Canadian nadianl li'ould I m,irry agrtin ? 1 .'3am atituea . farmed• and mf11lufllr'1:nrer. ,say "ho„ Don't you think it would ,be to The weir are all clinrniing I far rca your Own nrh'antaee, ns well as to they go, tlrc� adg'alit,t.t,e of t',talra,da as a nation, An,d .1 tilt there are tiates -viten they that articles should be grown and bother One �o- made at hOme that are consumed by I really doll't lalaw! the C'anadlan people ? 'Thine: the matter Over, and see whether it is At at),:er tirncs. too, rhe the worlil not your duty to work for this end. nppear.t3 ,slow, I'irltlr so mn'lly place,; ;L tivoman can't 0 ifnlquR she is flanked by a )n+an-and 1So- I really don't know! Perilxrp,I if soma lovable sweathealrt onto camie .110 offeree: to sharo both. leis limirt• and hes nnrnc, niight be persuaded to inter the gamic•- I reially rion't know! is ail very wail a ("yltic to he, Ot worban is elvectost• when lov- ing, ,eau aeo-- 11-•-if I love'+t min, and T islets' he loved' mp_ I really don't know 13o�toil J'otlrnal. The f'ir'st Vr-N id•tn't of the Alnericmn WO SoCietl' ~vats El.da.s Boudenot, alt. '01, off a wordc to prove, th,e 4d'rttc,ial.t the Alnorlvan Inalianav from tier, Cwt Teo Trilrs of Israel, 1"Ikins at the states. X. Y. Pro6s. Wbeia Senator l:Ikilte -vas in college be, liked to ,see the racer-. One day he arnd his chum slipped off together from )&c.11oal, ailed on tho Wily to 111ao track came across their professor, Who. i;•aid Ili harprds•e: , , c '$Young gentlern^n, when does this mean ? yotl ,s scyns.'p haultl be at your let,- Elkins said: ",Sir, we wanted to go to lessons acrd also to ibe races, so we tr-OW"I for it, and it came down for the races,”' "Ab I Thein you must Have used a two-heaulod cojn, or triol the ganl- bAer',s plan of lroad„s I win, tills you lo,ml, "No, 'ser; it vias a fn,ir toss," said Young I"wrie. "What dici you throw, up?" "IVa throw a lump of coal lip. If it stopped lip wo Esme to sohooi, It it caste down we went to the races, and hero we rice, :sir." 11, , FOUTS RAPID.81 ,�.., .,.,.....,� IS ISI LIN* The Markets. we,..�w•w...,...,.•,r+...•,...�..,+e.., � ....�-„-., Toronto le;iviners' alaricet. April J;.TThe recelpts of :;•rain on the street yesterday were small, awing to wet lnorning. 1'i'4eat steady, 100 :bushels of red ,venter selling at 71'1-2, and 100 Inti hf is of goose at 65c. Barley firmer, :100 buhhels sell - Ing at 431-3 to 4.4c, (Juts are firm, with sales of 1.00 bushels at 35 to 87c. flay dull, only a, fitly loads .beIli; received, and priccs, ullohanged. Straw is nominal. I)ressOd hags are unchanged. Light brOught $8.25 to ..138.10, anil lioavy lib, •rOilsawing is ilte range of quota- tions Wheat, white, bushy 1, 610 to 730 reel, 70 1.-21 to 71.1-2c sIinlug, 68 to 70c; goose, b:, to 66('; v:its, 35 to 370'; peas, 75 to 78e: hay, thiriutlIv, per ton, yl:: to $1.5, do., Inised, p;rr ton, �U to 39 , straw, liar ton, $7. i0 to $El ; al)JA os, per bbl., $1 to $1.7i-); ; dressed hog.,;', per etrt-, $S to $8.40: eggs, new laid, per dozen, 181-3 to 13L; Mutter; daery, lAer ]b., 17 to 28c ; dO , creamery, -21 to '.ie : clhhck- ans, per ell., J :' to 14e : ducks, por Ib. 1.0 to :;0 - t , J ttf krvs r i > AL 11. 17 t0 ,l 1. _ I .Or : 1AOtutoL•s, per b:il,, $1.''U to I $1.25. . , Trade i:+ fair, chioily in small lets out Of NLor'e. 12-11 weal r h, 6.+10 to $8 per I)II&II. timGLltz• $2 to :t3. i'Ort.itto Daipy 3larkeln. Batu I-T]w nvark':•t i:; quiet awl featurvi asp, with lair cviliand for cllai've gliailitier, %%-11jela alk, firm. 1F'e Iqu•oto a5 Jollows: Fresh, large rolls, 1,7 to 18e, flzpp-�t, 1 -lb. IiHilLs, 18 to 19c; poorer{,ra.ies, rolls anti tuns, 14- to 1uc; ells ntw-y print41 21 1 to 2.3- Pond: fr•+e,sh MyattO, 19 to "Oe, held IS 1-2c. l 13999i—Rneeillts M1Ir- fair, &II(I the demand proal, s;lieu at 11 'to 711' 1-1c per dozaat. 1C'hee'se-1falket firm. We quote: Flneet 133-3 to idc, trgiirv, 11. to 14 ;1-4c. Toronto 1,ive stud' 3laeket. Espm t cattle, choice, per cwt St 50 eo $4 9-5CIO medium ................ 4 U0 it)4 25 dOCOw..................... 4 30 to 4 25 h)ferjorcows............. 2 75 to " 4,; Butchers• cattle, pirked....... 4 ill to 4 .,0 Butchers oattle, choice...... 3M a) 1 l5 Butchers' cattle, fair......... _' a to 3 iU do common .............. •100 to : 70 Bulls, export, heavy, ......... 3 49 to 4 15 do li ht ....... @•cede s. -bort -keep........... 3 iuj 4c 4 25 do medium ................ .1 UO to 3 0,, do light ..................... ii 2.1 to :i i0 Stockerachoice................ 3 •1:i to 3 A9 :3tockers, cummull,..........- 2 23 to 3 75 Idllch cows, each.'. ach... -1.) U0 to un 00Sheep, ewes• per cwt.....,... 4 UO to 1 60 Bucks,perc-rt................. i 50 to 4 01) Grain -led ewes, wether,;...... 6 00 to 6 25 Grain -fed buck, ................ i )U to 6 0o Barnyard lambs.. •. .......... 5 170 to Calves, per ll, t&d.............. S 0U to IU Illi hogs,select, perewt....,....,, 6 rr•1'T to n Ou Holm Licht, per cwt .,........ U 37': to U tl0 i Hocs.fat, per Cwt ............. U :37 1. 10 U 00 Hides, %A ool, Tallow, &Iter. Iijries-Tito riuirket is quiet at un- changed prices Dealers pay 7+2c• fol No. 1 ,green cogys, 6; is for No. 1, x 1141 51¢c for \o. 3. Cured. dull, at 7?ic for cows. At country poiitts t;rean hides are lie lower than above pric(,,s. Calfsklus—otterings are fair. 8,kins tip to 14 labs. bring 10c for No. 1, and, 80 for No, 13. Above tilts w-oiglt't rifles • 1• 1 I Cleo. C Chalker' Tells :'6 bat+i Dodd's Kidney Pills Dick for Him. - TOOPJC Him l4 roan 11% ~Bed, Made 01lia *t I'Ve,l. tan Able and Willing, to 9D*i a 6'air Day's Work. Ilousoy's Raptds, Ont., arxeh 2a, t>~tleulal•J—As :ie•er:v city, town and Tillage in Ctra.00. fiRelma to be ffIV14. 'Its evidence as to the wonderful cures resulting• from Dodd";s Kidney, F1l)) there is no reason Housey's 'Rapid shuuld not be, in line. People iter kava lKiddley troubles just the sains as elsewhere, and like others tbey;' ha.vo used Dodd's Kidney Pills ane ` been cured. • One of the most remarkable cures wast that of Gem O. 'Chalker. Ha says: "'I am 'cured of my Kidne , Cumplaint. I have; No doubt about t4 in the least. I weigh ten pounds more, than i t" t c h I did fourteen mo n months a do a :fair clay's work every day, and• I am clear of my old enemy, lamej. back, heavy, aching arms, dull bloat ed eyes -yes, it is all gone, prurgeti Out by Dodd's Kidney Pills. No one can renAze the relief ex -•j rept those who base been through ' it all. I was so bad I could not work, hard, .but was compailed to make ;w living. My head felt so bid that my' oyes would seem to float. I felt tirekl< all the time, ;:u ax tris a. ms felt use ess a , Y 1 timtts and ser very heavy. At last• i was laid up and could do no, work. '3 "Then I was induced to try Dodd's Itiduoy 1>111s, and you see the result t It only took six boxes to cure inti': completely." And _lir. Chalker is only one o m:tny in this neighborhood who cbare;e their ;good health up to Dodd's Kidney Pills. e Once of His c'ol'lies, I i..•,•ther-Ser von are going to marry Mr. •Litton, Berthn? Why, it will a1- most seem as if we were relatives, lvon't It? You know, _*ter. Tiltol Frail Leal to marry me." B�ertilai-Yes, Henry often langha� a4out hits early Indiscretion, as lee' calls it. He said the 'other night: hie couldn't understand what het ere•'- Olin" in vou- But, of course, ]lei exa'ggeratets, dear.-Boaton Trans -i cI•dpt. ' A skin that burns with eczema fey )Ant, oul,v ,nlslhltrlr, but it wearindKs o4 the flesh. Ill s.1 r),Ixes faithfully use weaver's Syrup j luunnally and )ycaver'a Cerate exteruallv.1 They ahtays cure. Nett Joke Vroin Scotland. A tt:t,In %rav3ellelrg, On a tsmallt 1)l4tn-ll rrlieway in the Highlands, t�ucldenly raine to a. sra,rlelstIll. one, of the ;P•!,-,vengers poked his head out Of` tele -v .;,tow: to ascertain the cativo and jt.'•.t .•aught the guard as be: und-v th,e wi'n'dow on Iris way,( to the 'engine. "Why are we Chopping?" lie in-, qulrod. ""loot, mon, ye mann jus' @ode aj -v+ee: the watter's Bane arf thaj :toll."—lTla$law Baillie. V rre c. awe r. Rltre•p:,•kdrtc—The offeringi; are moll- CALIFORNIA lVEtllf,'i'si. orate, and prices rule firlhl at t.ic The repurts matte by the savings to $1.10. bunks of ;Sall 1:'I'aauiSuO recently IYOol-71he marlcet is quiet. with, nlhOw -deposits of $156,817,637. This outside advicos reporting •tn easier Julmel,se sum exceeds the record of fr,eleng. fleece is, quoted here at all former velars, and represents 1:5'4 to 16c for -washed;.at ti?¢c for about ;5:180 per capita. _ILe this is unr:l lslipd. Pulieal supers gyre goted more than three times the averag:, at 15% to 16c, and extras art 1.812 to "atiings bank deposit per capita for ltic. tile whole linitect ;states, it is cer- 'Aillow—The market issteer cis. taillrlyt • good showing. Nor is it Dealers are paying 6c forr rendpre(l. confined to San I'rii,rciheo. The and 4e for rough. I;rndrrrrl sr.Ifs returns from the Banks of tittle State, ;ave' banks, show - :,t 611, to 6?'c in small lots. c -National all agg'reglite blereape, of assets Por the ,year, of S:35,:376,f)24, This ex-. Where Burns, alnther Dietl. coeds the highrst former record of Poulton is a sinall parish in East gain by $�'1,:i71,4!)?. a very eatis- Lothian, quite close to the noun- factory "tate of affairs. California is not simply a land] ty town of Haddington. In Bolton for 'the tourist, but for the investor, chul•ehyard is tine X.•-stdng ptacr of and the farmer. Perhaps no others both Girbert Burns and his mothrr. farmers enjoy tau ,large an Income Gilbert -va.� factor of an eslatt` ere California f;armpre. A rate pent cent on theft in-estmrnte that, the) e, Lennotlove, 1111,1 IIP sn(I 111F4 would satisfy the eastern farmer, , family, along lvjth lily luother, lived its considered very meagre here.' at a cottage named Grant,.; Irirarg, 1?rnit farming has :thrays been pro - at theraldtt of t.ira public road kaki- fitab)e; forttuloa have been made, Ing 1r0111 lladdington to B,lLoll, a, if' otange.v, 'tail the groat yield of cottage 11mr aleatodj•shcal Jtvr Ileo alfalfa, make,, da.ir01lg a paying. gram i:4 er('cted It _blain but stab_ 1ltkhtstr„v: 0L. -tall, tal stone, su1• OU111i0d by a Land Its 1Owel1 in prier; than It. m"r,hirc irolt radiing, will ever bo, •drain, and raters froin the east over Stmihrrn Pacific lines •••• IYectFTCFik I}lite-lift;�, are now based on it. filre of ,$.33 from Clhjony,a, .so that it is a good. T,inc* a pudding brisilt svitir a plain time to see ill(, o-3Late. 'nh'es Crust Iuatle of chopplld hnr't rent: flOnl• .rate will espdi•o .I,lua 'L:)tt. Write P. Bi: Int a -A %vith graim. and nildi - roll, iI (;float(`,GeneIal Ap;ent, SOut'hern: Gilt an inch thivk; eat up I. ponuie of Paclfic, Detroit, ,ifiell. 1-0,11,11d atook :and hprinklo with floor, _. .._... . pepper and - cvgit.. vhOp a Small onion Whale*s Appmite. fine, Ptt t a1I into tc 11711,41 dish, add a A -whale"'; le.ti app• ,.'tr is phearamenal, cup of grater, cover ovr,r wjth it o-ucl ,tads the ('hit,mgo �',)tvs. His chief crust, "'I'd ill- it In ngvrjl-rlo,ir+cd diet eous::etr Or jrllyfisIl, He has . clto. th. leer. c* s . i v a at eepan of water boil tsi mply to of.eu hitt month and pad- . bug rllpldLi' anal put the baKin in, {hr cllx3 :Hall:,' 1••:suimly in ordolc to take opolling do-vllgvall'-is, leaving tho lid to .;0111°fi h by V!s,-vftronload. Such Off tee Rall TlIal, and lot it boil two is fix„ m•-thoI •1:i-opLril by the whale-' and 011-11,11f Ilours, adding water it bol:.ra whale. 'ele. sperm -shale, on it bolls army. Sca•ve, with a rich test Conti 1r•-, onlitur. < hul:e sqUTAS, gravy. -Ch loll go Herald, webghillig often svivr 63 .ons. Like his brother, tit-? whalobone whale,; 'ante to Cultivate Lobster cels h -a moi.�t 1'0 eOmsta nt la on the loop- i Robinson Cruso0s '.,;land, Suan leer- Out for food, Otherwis-e 11,3 would starve. As many as fourteen seals, nandez, is surroanded lay lobster beds have been taken from a ,30 -foots 1 so pr•odnetive that % big fortune "killer." Other fbslb'es of enormous Qu. awalts some man who will start a pe'tdt� are not Uncommon. The disc.! canning establishment there. So. at fi's'h, for example, thrhves on sarq' least, says Tuan C'a•lasaff, a native dimes and other small fish. Assume. of 011'111, who now, lives on the Island, darn; that: ane bluefish eats ten smal9 and has just come to the Unitod fWI a• day it has been rigtured tilm't States in search of the ca'pit'al need- . it requires ten thous+ahld million ed for the 'enterprise. The Island s1iIA'dines to food the one tboustand now Oras 180 inlinbitants, but none million Muefigh on our coasts every of them bas sufficient mewas to gath- ,I faummer. Most curhous of all eater!! r er t1h'e rich' harvest of lobstere that '49the Itvdz,o a strange, creature 1:11111, tine nine months' open season miakes can :ha turned inside out without im. paciring its appetite, err Its paver to possible. e n!t, We make Granby Rubbers and Overshoes out of pure new rubber. Can as much be said of any other Jrlake? cost the maker more, but they cost the wearer less, for one pair does the work of two pairs of ordinary rubbers, " Granby Ru bbers' weaa.r Rilt3e iron."