Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1901-06-14, Page 3p•o••••.......4.4.....•••••••••••,...mosok.44.........••••mausaiwaseywasiusmuawasmo••••••••••.0".....P."4 12111.1.016MIM•1111.110141.1 0.44.11.1166flIN The wire Weigher The Ahrtighty's Weights and Measures the Only Perfect Ones Ever Ma.de Was:Keeton report- In 'this .dits- course, from. a symbol of the Bible, Dr. Talmage urges the adoption of an un- usual mode of estimating character, and shawls how different is the divine way groin the human way. Text, Proverbs xvi, 2: "The Lord weigheth the Spirits."Te subject of weights andmeas- ures Is discussed among all nations, is the subject a legislation and bast much to do with the 'world's prosper- ity, A. system of weights and meas- ures was invented by Phidon, ruler of Argos, about 800 years before Christ. An ounce, a pound, a ton, were di - .rent hi different lands. Henry 111 decided that an ounoe should be the weight of 640 dried grains of wheat from the middle a the ear. From the. reign a 'William the Conqueror to Henry VIII the English pound was the weight sit 7,680 grain e of wheat, Queen Elizabethdecreed that a pound should be 7,000 grains' of wheat taken from the middle of the ear. The piece of plati- num kept at the office of the exchequer In England in an atmosphere of 62 F. decides for all Great Britain what a pound must be. Scientific representa- tives from all lands met in 1869 in Paris and established international standards of weights and measures. You all know something of avoirdu- pois weight, of apothecaries' weight, of troy weight. You are familiar with the different kinds a weighing ma- chines, whether a Roman balance, Which is our steelyard, or the more usual Instrument consisting a a beam supported In the middle, having Iwo basins of equal weight suspended to the extremities. Scales have been in- vented to weigh substances huge like mountains, and others delicate tatough to weigh infinitesimals. But In all the universe there has only been one bal- ance that could weigh thoughts, emo- lions, affections. hatreds. ambitiens. That balance was fashioned by an Al- mighty God anal is hung up for perpet- ual eervice. "The fiord weigheth the spirits." This divine weigher puts intothe bal- ance the spirit of charity and decides how much a it really exists. le may go -for nothing at all. It may be that 11 Julys to the unfc.rtunate. "Tune this °Jed do not bother Me any more." it may be an oneasienal Impulee. It may denend Upon the mention of the liver or the Ftyto Of brealieceet partaken of n. little while before. it may be ea1 forth by the loveliness of the solicitor. It may lie exereleeil in spirit of rivalry, whiffh eratelaally pays. nely neighbor has given so taM,11: therernre I entre g ive tie melt.- it is a:evidential or an•- ceeional eer eeae-nuelle. When etteh 'spirit of charity le put'into tile hale once 4an1 weighed, teed and men ate! • Weft ten and ray there is notleine, er it des`n het weigh tee newt ae dram, whielt is veiny the oreeeinletie part ef an ounre. or a te•resple, whieh le only the. Zitth ;tart al an ounce. A mast may gave lee loteeennels end Hoene nude 4•1 donate with r.:tacip ond andel retch eiraelne•eatffeen. and he nig pet nu Iteavenie retaletaitlen. lint into The divine nettle:a anether Mare1 .10‘112,- lepheeri., It n•arie teem leave el Gee: atni Item. It 14 hem In Inert en. II ie a lifelong thonett1.4 111. Mar have a Witten de"- Inre or a nenny to Lenten.. but tiee reamer ire whieh that giver teen:nice; elereen that L9 a tench:41.y tne. • pionied eleheitale. The 4..tot, tenny given tray, teffneifflaCing the illintled eirtnen- litatee0e. atteaet ae menet angeble at].1 ;et:ate:Lady renneutlen titueigh the eeetee: given in Q:rloolt .aas lame it Ii•te e - pelted the a:env:el:1* lee li.Ee tt IS not the amount niece. Z17:11t! Hee possible. If I can say a.nything good about others, I will say it, If I can say nothing but vile of them, I will keep my lips shut as tight as the lips of the sphinx, which for 8,000 years has looked off upon the sands of the desert and uttered not one word about the desolation. The scheme of reconstructing this world Is too great for me to manage, but I am not ex- pected to boss this job. I have faith to believe that the plan is well ined out and will be well executed. Give me a brick and a trowel and I will begin now to help build the wall. I am not a soloist, but I can sing Etock of Ages to a sick pauper. I cannot write a great book. but can 'ick a cinder out of a child's eye or a splinter from under his thumb nail. I now enlist in this army that is going to take the world for God, and I defy all the evil powers, human and satanic, to discourage me. Count me into the service. I cannot play upon a musical instrument, but I can polish a cornet or string a tarp or ap- plaud the orchestra." All through that man's experience there runs a faith that will keep hint cheerful and busy and triumphant. Put also into these royal scales the ambitious spirit. Every healthy man and woman has ambition. The lack of it is a sure sign of idiocy or im- morality. The only question is, What shall be the style of our ambi- tion? To stack up a stupendous for- tune, to acquire a resounding name, to sweep everything we ca.n reach into the whirlpool of our own selfish- ness -that is debasing, ruinous and deathful. le in such a spirit we get what we start for, we only secure gi- gantic discontent. No man was ever ina.de happy by what he got. It all depends upon the spirt with which we get it, and the spirit with which we keep it, and tbe spirit with which we distribute it. Not since the world. stood has there been any Instance of complete happinese from the amount of aceumulation. Give the man of worldly ambition sixty years of bril- liant successes. Be sought for re- nown, and the nations speak, his name. Ire sought for affluence, and he is put to his wits" end to find out the best stoelts and bonds In vehleh he may make Investments. ITe Is 411reetor In leanIts enough and truntee. in enough Institutions and preeident of enough companies to bring on poresie. of ehiele iS nOw dying. The royal bolanees are lifted to weigh the endritIon wedith leas con- trolled a lifetime. What was the worth, of that embitnene: Hew much are it e,-1.,141 for usefutnee.: and *heaven? Leen than a neruple. lese tie en a smile oe, sated. lees than an atone lee) than nothing. Have a funeral a Mile long with carriage% let the rielectit robee ,leslaStlos rustle ahout 1114, VanI3Pt. earicattere the evene by choirs whiele item emeeeffel are the dead that dl' in lie Lord." That neate"o life Se a fall- en. arad It Ws heirs seufne In the rurrgtt'no= oourt about the ineanteoly Of the etator tante% a latit and teeta- t wit ewe, ne pf0.1,Mlattan the failure, Hut look into the tive,ffeat 03 that neitealhey who. without enyileg any- thing theett it. le planning tale life- titne in:Inter. Preen an •4114 benit rati- te' written in ilebtote tend Inertly neaten in da-nele. hut teeth lielereee and Greek trateleted into getel Vete- he read,e Of geeat farmer Mee 'AVM, a greet tneellanic Eike Allektailate ures ever entablished Was established In the heavens before the world was made, and will continue to 40 its work after the world Is 'burned lip. To measure the time we have eaten - dare. To measure the lightning we have the electrometers. To meastire the heat we have the thenmemeters. To measure the atmospheric pressure we have the barometere. To measure souls we have the royal balances. "The Lord weighoth the spirits." In the same divine scales the *Piet of na.tions and civilisation is weighed. Egyptian civilisation did its"vrork, but it was cruel and supeestitious: and idolatrous and defiant of the Almighty. It was cast out and cast down. The tourist finds his chief interest not in.' the generation that now inhabits the regions watered by the Nile and sprinkled bY her eascades, but in the temples that are the skeletons of an- cient pride and pomp and power -her obelisks, her catacombs, her mosquee, the colossus ef Rameses, the dead cit- ies of Memphis .and 'Thebes, the tem- ples of Luxor and Karnak, the mu- seum containing the mummified. farms of the pharaoha. It is not the Egypt of to -day that we go to see, but the Egypt of many centuries ago. Iler spirit has departed. Her doom was sealed. "The Lord weigheth her spir- it," And so the spirit of the American nation is put into th.e royal balance, and it will be weighed as certainly as all the nations of the past were weighed and as all the nations of the present are being weighed. When we ge to estimate the wealth of the na- tion, we weigh its gold and silver and coal and iron and copper and lead, and all the steel yards and all the bat- 11. Alpha and 00101431 -These aro of the eeven 14tar fi and the seven ances are kept busy. So ninny tone the firet and last letters of the Greek golden candk,,tinks.e ..Tdd diwidd or of this and so many tone of that, a alphabet. Title is :t figurative ex- the Lord lie with them that fear mountainful of another anetal. That Pression. -used to show that Christ nen,. Is well. We want to know the mining nee; "the source and the coasumince. When we reall (liars word let our wealth, the manufacturing wealth, the tiou" of all things.. fro is from *tint- prayer be, "Lord. open Thou mina, agricultural wealth and the huehel ity to eternity. What thou seest- eyes that I nem.' behold wonarims measure and the scales have an 17n- The Proplietie v ision that W114 re- things out or Thy law." One hae vettled to him on the Lord's; Day. A truthfully sal 1, "Visi •n in spiritual portant work. But know right well there is a divine weighing in the coun- hook -A pnreinnent roll. mr.VMP church- thing's, as in nature. leponds net on try all the time going on, and I ,an C'g """ ":"41'V0.01" denotes perfeetion. efyloeo.41141,fvillitrel;it "Doubtless there were hundreds- of t]in tell the t " d stin If vau eiturchee in Asia, efinor at that thee, mire 'to hear the tait I err site. But will tell me whether It shall he a lied honoring nation, reverentlae to tee iTilaten7.rmeiell,.‘(1.?11131:4(14‘rtvroi.1 temintle;onhreisniteitie; Igt'?*'•1 are es, ler they see : an :tftur ear.,4 for they 1* ere* only book of his authorship, ohserring Samuel Ie. .1. tee tho "shall note" of the law of right "1'1'4 and 'S''r°91 11"' wine - given on Mount Sinai and the Inta "II" Mimi) ttlivN.K represientinr love given on the Mount of Beatitude, ineve rtierenn:. to the esentinent 111 One day out of the week observed rne, Anin. nor lo 1,-ia Minor; bet to a In revelry. but In holy convocatien. marriage honoree in veremony ant ffe sur111 Prolit-Pe Ite della Minor teilled .t -In, et a Bploaets wee 111* SUNDAY SCHOOL SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LE880N NO. XI JVNE 10, 1110i„ ••••,•1/4••••11011.1...M. Jeans Appears to Jobn.-Rev. 1: 9.0. Commentary. -9. ohn-dolin, the author of this book, was St. John, the a.postle, the son of Zebedee, the be- loved disciple, and the author of the four other books of the New Testa- ment that bear his name. Your bro- ther -A member Of the family of God, a, Christian, Companion -"Partner," - R, V. In tribulation -PA word derived •from the threshing of wheat. It took bard biows of sorrow a,nd persecution to Sep:mete the chaff from the wheat. Palmas -This ielaini is in the Allgean Sea, about seventy miles southwest of Ephesus. "11 Is about twenty miles he circumference and is ebeky and barren. Its loneliness and seclu- sion made it a oultable place for the banishment of criminals; and to it the apostle John was banished by the Emperor DemItlan, near the close of the first Christian century • though some scholars give an ettr'lier date, under the Emperor Nero." John sur- vived nil of the other apostles a whole generatioe. At the time he wrote the Apovalypse. Paul and the other apos- tles had beret dean] thir•ty years : hence .Tolin was truly the patriarch of the apostolic age."-Godbey. 10. In tin, Spiril-Ineler the Influ- ence of the Sprit. ikfile.1 ani qui At- e:led by the Spirit. The Loner; day-. "The 'lay made saered to all Chris- tians for all time by the resurreetion of ,T1.1141111 fl*OM illi• 11PaCI. I.. was the day of light itiel salvation." firSt Mir'aLqa rttifikg tilt) 411qt11, to b0110111 111.0 W01131t,:efiti glent aid 1.1m Mount of Tranefiguratlea. en I also to be witness of His suffevinge itt Gethsemane. John saw Goa in all thie .The pare in heart see -God in -each meat at life. Amid theee ourward scenes of Lenell- ems and desolation God vouclienied to Ilre servant the wonderful *Lerida - ins; ef letle future plans concerning; His einercle awl the evorld. 'The deeeriptIon given of the via len John saw Is wonderfully' grand, "Let us form a. mental pleture Of the per- Oonality described. Before the eyes of the seer arta,n le a colossal figene* robed entirely in white, Hie face and feet alone bare t the former of sun - like eplendor, .the latter 'of IV Whit e - heat brillinney jr-OoltS -of snowy whiteness ercee n His head. He speaks, an Me words flash like a double- edged sword from His mouth, and Jlis voce renoun is through space like many Watere. Tee extende els arneon His palm is eestinte a circle of seven A:U.1043 1141 He walks' mej*stically be- tween two rows of imps blazing, upen their Stan,t1S. The N over- powering) Iln•1 Lille as one (lead. Although our "Seer" fell me one dead, lie &eon felt a, heed laid yawn lelm, awl a voice saying unto elm, "Fear not."' How frequent'y does this expresenon (emu in the Seripteres ? Why etould nat St. John fear ? Be- ene:so who spoke was the ape who could say, "1' am the first end the last. I 0113 1111 that liveth nal l'101,S (100.13 ; an•1 behold, 1 am alive for evermore. Amen." Ile ever liveth. Let thds thought Ina; Ire Its faithfieness in our service. St. John is then dirmted to write the 'Mingo which he had seen, need to him was, diseloso.1 "the mystery , ("bred. in .%'4:--Thist Asia dope no; net, I _rm. s n Val Etchene -- Meat aoneal tarot he - streets, Wein toned systems of meanie , 4 1411144+ 1911. peeredt tier,. wee the ler- satettlons will live, and all the tv•m• r 1; ,3.. " til`ti 1 e • • ' In all parts ref our la.nd, then the tn.. gesit and tutoa impir taut. Fur a ;les- , t Oat* 1/ 4 1'1301 4 61111;$, • drams prosperltles of the Prment t.1"1"" nu. tniorento tensed to /OW orely a faint hint of Mk,- greater Pro1l• • who et met- that ansA,.v, tte» word perities to entree. "vactee" benne, 10.4 41 141 S1114111ije per - The wish of this cermon is to enta• net epeeenen Golden eanalketiehn-- • pharine the invieiblen-to •show that teimi„,e„ e .2,11 teaedete wee there are other halanees besides thee' wonlil be a teeter ta rue Not etei• ni teraee and platinum and atUntin:1,01 teeenenteee with e„.%•te icreneeto. hut ' and net in earthly store, Itfmtitte: ' '-r eeven e.aatill •nteeks the stern •the most important ne* et en tee gomol.4 $Wkis net Chr.t.11.*s *if led that the veates *it Well weigh /Are. 3,bgatt,3t1. p1I, • non I 0 GIIIBLING New York Judge Police Shir CAPTURED QUITE The Mar ‘e, ''''-`;4:04.0iitiW*.01`441•Ar.;40;044••:•'40.44:?0,•‘*". 1.040illt)tr, 1141.44, l't4111',1•414•• t;)11.:11311:Vd.ntg aro .t.t./0.,:og- quota' atone at import alit '14111.14.w avtitre$ Ca h. Soften „Chleagen.. 1)0J 70 1-3 New xork......... U 03 ' 7e 8-8 7 i 0Q( St. Louise,. 77:0i .1,13--1. Toledo,- 74 1-4 72 3-8 Pereoet, red... 144, Detroit, white -. 73 84 0 00 Dulute, No. 1, N... 73 70 Dinuth, No, 1 .70 013. Minn., No. 1 N 0 00. , 6884 reroute warmers* eteritet, raTtilileerertgrucloot.nuirket here to -day W0149.4 Wheat -Terns linn,•lred intellele white sold 1.-ele lower at 71 1-:20, zoo 1.neesele of re-! 1-2c lower at 71 to 7] 1-2c, 100 Imeliels of spring 40 lower at 70 to f 71c, an 1 500 buseele of goose 1 1-2 to 2 1-12e lower at 05c., The sadden drop in the priee of goose wlient attributet to thee paor oat- preeent and buyers an not oar? to itt'atk;e dement] for it at On ta-Pour hundred busite s sold un- cuange.•1 nt e.nt e -live 14;2144 0•011.1 tut- clutage0 at $11 to $13 per tea. Straw -One keel saki $1 11.--giter at el'f) r n. Petatocs-Bea'ors were ready to buy nt 40 to #10,,, per bag, hut were nn3b:e. to sec 'leo any at even those figures. Potatu,m, are very sea.ree and tilt rri.tricet liere Amine. firensffet Floes -Market rather quiet, with prier.? anenantge.,1 at 88.75 to 11.0.:.11`3*.orro7toealliti've Stoek 'elarkets. Export c:ittle. choice, per cwt. ee at to 6 40 litwherk.' c.ittle.ettmee.. 1 75 to 5 Oe done -ilium ..... 1;1:111.:71:55: tott:Vo: 34341 0061,51i EXt.urt elOVel Buttlierb'eattle fa.r a aie to 5 eth. Liuteher,.. cattle pelted Iluilateciart. !wavy, per ea.,- 3 715 to 4 '26. 1301100:1;;;Oitrt. 3 500 to 3 73 Fee& re.ehoretteep ...... mew...mete- ........ tot° .537.: Steelters, le• to ree lb - mealiest. and betters. 2 30 10 3 nit 4'3 to 475 e 21 to 3 5l) OIN staton7:: Per e;". 4 75 to 1 Od $ Does Work k d1 AN OUTF1TI 23' to 3 110 Lannt.,glatil.tell, p...0r ev.t 1 nd to 6 00t au r.pring. men. 2 at to 4 01. Catves. per newt 1 da to 8 op Iteg,I. choice. Der cwt. 7 tO to 0 01 1.0.1$... corn iod 5 7.5 to 0 oa none ages, p.e• OW( o V! to 0 co Ito,N, tit, per cwt,6.30 60 0 110 eves.. per c is t au to 4 5,1t lettere . ee to 44 ("Leese jilariiets. le -mid :tate 7. oirIPP# # #: 1#„. tap. Ittlittf40,2•1'.1: b4).Nes, w ) terk 0! ".10 i" " .111 t I, ems; fl 44) . 4 t 7•4.71.1r. 1411111114T 0111.1 I01111:10112., j 0011IIj 014' w.ttekt '7 At Ir. 1111,1 tit -kg ;to. ,r „ r .141 to. lay 784 boxosi 4Pf 14041. 1•0•.1.1 411 1,44•1:041s1100 5. .1.11, .1, 7.71 811,1 :4m raiding tide aft. ii114. ,n. an,,A al N., :4; 1 Tin 1; tle nit elle! v. as 8 1 I'li,aver eintee.•., 1 0 a 10. ,11: han pto rtn. bee. h le t Mk 1 voloret, goitti' itU/411'it WO, ;#1:###^0 .1 1 11 lt0 CHI r-mri` -fftly are not :Ile heenortant 4.10 M ei-Vatalsie Pees ,,1*. 18. • "nein nAtti 14,$•^% earl*. .1 that firantI.*ral. .an 7 -At th thieve. ate!) weifth need. Denee..1 1,?tstql .re -**1 gliire walla 0,10••90 4,01.1 104.• low ; hi y 1;31;4 is or 1011,0 . not ttio murti ror happgae..13 tiriAn hot- • fr,,i,i 44114 ,..1 e„0411. orr, see „f 4xne4 Perri:ate was king and lei t: •.ffe t4 at It pceede A eel.. er fv„, 4 1 0044, ' 9A'11044'44 t 040'0' 'it 410' %V: ;•, ad. va. stit7 at, 8 Ialo anell large doutheilen. but wan eleterinin ; :teen 4. olagitt 0E0 41 Ito. 41 toe tetelee tV.15. egainet the itennatue, e0.1 lone tele • oreet, le„. till' 900124°1 prolit. P. 11# 111 :4„,,#, °;## 017 enerae, the friend a the 14.img. Said ,• wor ;#;# lama Woa. 1111," ',4 11,4 tee oasse 1.•••••`1 '0:1 lei t dee.- '7 ---TIrye were 1,444 lvoir01 -01 o t•li:. OttaW;1, Chemin lam„,str,„ v..4004 y0,41 Itave ;4,11. r„,„„11,, tut env eta • esteenaaa 19,L4•11114 cm. 1311,171g tat* 1,3tY'.. 141010,7* 01* 01 1 4.131:. 3.0131t10. v't 'ti111 'on do teeteg” "1" en • ' 'u • beeant ran "a nava eirodeff • 11.01.44.*1' 2301A rnapine and end 13,: co"o7o4, "1"%, WIculoo ' #8;,#;:s. 111 ;;10:11- /It IDAI#4 44114 03,4.: it r4115'1'..4 .100 *1'44 !!,1°,',.."11.'-::U liPe• iteeve net tereent " P 1 41' :: A at, 3°1 tentetee."' "'And what when non effre-, ette• line .11.1 , . 1017At 144,1 -113, 10.4 neve k t.t at" .1t1.2 1 4* " trt.et t ennettle•rael elleny'?" • .4e.1 tieel tlD° 11' " "' t -t* i'0,1• 1,10"!1•15 • oft I *tf Pe1"1"' f' 9.490'.1C7,,19 1 1'/:4'/""" %%tilt ovete AftenA and mite 44iRth ti4,ty • a VIA - 1.,c.i; 44f. q%itv,t, 41,41t - 4".44. 311 neike. leati aot, 8 fir "When 9tteve are t'errinulereel. elite t!* vralVt:te4 41 4410,0"21 4;1,• heal 401 1.,441.1 441 thAt ,ittempt"."- "'Then ,Ne ,D`IVI'D 1 "a4Zi'coilti 1.4 :1*';'•!°, etnete "4.5111- leta,:eletea ani • l'Ilt't4P "1•'•-• - hie "..v11n4. tr, Q •Itte 7.---- Alt t • i'lt114,4 what we emcee 1••••.:4 -heree• Enatee 11.4: 4E% •S'4.-1,.'• 1% • '4) °A. (ha vag,'4ug geg 6,. ei eat tee ley 77.e ea eine et end ee, tehnele tentatet neegf whew eel 31 We 5 • P" •%1 t. ei 4,090- I ten 4.0-144*a 0:1,1 f.h...„ /;', 1.4t,.1. a a, .,5 D e*‘. W 14441 111 1 0'01 11•14,"oll Ll7,3 51 119'1 "Well. when ."•11 one enedatee. tenet ' 2'1.) 11"111.111'11, 11 110:d" " Ua. 11-1' - "te- rale wa0.0-s, a,. se. a eel, Idte *-11.-eer1 va: 13°,' 14.771YP.I. S.1141.4 ' ;Mat AvvVer At? nole14 g7,75Ilt ails:in and enjoy etataff.eleeen* '"a" -P ""'-'• 16"'‘`'' P Crean, Or '444 t UP' Pritat Matelict. e!sVp. ,5 .,nat 9111 Ntr ,t1,2•En!.. "411' *4' J0' a t airs„ d toe,. 4,ete. trq, rt 1.! '4 P. ani 70 14 eV .it 1' ylOt 17. fr, 4 t Le, 1 1'4 VoN tr,1 Itua- to,N, 11.-„„;„ 44 ij 9r 111„ gmater ino ,90-'. 40 gU,'11 --tta 19; VI eee "--/•L id- ' ”` "s• 11" ' - -"11111 'Ir.,- en Ut, * ; 11,1111 ' eettiehe. - 'et • _3 ant: or, ' 19'“ U. tit t' "". 411 "." 51116 Illic:M1-402,nb- 11' ellreat ur4 11,1.1c,•0 you n•te aliveally 11:-.e...4 ese , ' tee et utI tt: t t, 4 ,v„ u, 514 Wil ktt.'91,90. 1 44,L11 t Do. rtiltgti 1,1141 natal, gteat lit.e dentin. neue ettle,,n '" v„ 11, t''"111'1"11- yiP 4'5' teo el:41111c.. L. 31 414441431 get141.: t1s7is7,11114 tax' IteatE,-,.• vitt,211, knen len t.ente h 4i4"; 114 :4','4 • 444 4 , '1"1 • - • - '`'‘L;t:V4ardt 11"1 etteatttt,- Ennui. a tgtm..,z1 tehtleat when,. ,,,eneee :3; 3) 4. 1;,1,1.,' tr: 7•L'."7"a. 077 a *the tenteff•tente eaaseet 1945 14 s1'1!1 91 iet.'telh. 11,1 g4teta. DEtie ibtt`"1" t."4•41 11"1' 041 h'• -••'-w"2--•8 hz" t.1110. 110,7'1. the laitegl,:e. •-eff eitlent efnitte-- fftee 1te:• ut40,94 84;1 ft4t Lard wefigaetik selitite 9Eto J9 4-3' elf dat te.enge ter- ttsa r, 0713', a .1 T. • a 4 , 2 11t -'11',117t 1aQ' otte 1'4,01 1qed1 eaeatee, ••t re-Sttiell h•ait Ie'et-rrt"23 4,tue-tate. ;et:ally eeene •‘•:".. • tee ' a -dee .11 se, 4: e El - .13, : .42k Ut3,* 11,1J h ate tenetg irtdUI4 1•111,% hat lonenn 9- 144-431144-431 nettle hee r- Zuett• t.,••• ,.•••••• t ..t., 3n"1- un al tiff etletvuteit ceneutt thL's; ac the etatetti oh e 14t5144'44'l8a. 4." -"' • • . " 4 1,3 , , 737 ": :2.77 *`..7! .7.310.77) „mkt gilrk i" lase reFi •-er,,r• - • ..41.133 , " 4.*_1 ' ° t ' , "u" 0 v 41/4. OIL 3,-ktitr7.1*-7 e".(:13.71,t1fg• SPA va43%."., out '4.. t : t \,.. t.j'e 9 14 tttl GnteaOattee.n telhiu,i•ra At.hL.es, torAtibufford o.f $ 1 .s ;,rr,..re1.,317u3.3la•ftn*,etete deu ne-,--ene eeeerr..ene-1/4e. s or ,! dte,,,ti ll...dee ..effeera" eve•v;ades an -e • '14-ffirn- •,t41.. ., ,r•▪ „ po.igto•eii„nl•_.: 1'1 ' /4;1*•'•• ' •e1nie7,oa„•v.] e. att„ffeest erdait3a,e1ltai .4.pufffft.,tlertolruttse A eipitg ee11etn:n Toey atell e nett ff,77741 1 4 03'11-91w s ,,:aa 4k - 4te 1r1 111'3 5„,441(1ma. enV naonleu ter noe& aher worldl14'1454'4' '4 le 9101 14944- wegtael iter teInte11 14 4' tD retztnaciii;;t heee t•tuu hfateedetets knottyenly o heGhen taken pzece:oobrt revnetff4aeall vte4134•1 e t7,1 teen ‚41911094 pals ene hiscetvensee,,neentegeshinto tine him for ok”tO b.sirM. n:s set:31Ir1,4 7°214'3 , 441 entty ;net Telltetn t.e ' t 14444' 41 vile ane shows pfferalrhawer to 710tee ovwered 4541 24 tn1-t14944)19ISADA 4* 91e01177041 1111 V131 I though lee, 1,23,1 trcs. 4...4.,,,,strbat„ kis eterettran,eneceet and dinapeollel-• teeraze eund the iltraa"avaR 121".12j:-1'11rP1 197 8/Ir'Irs".; ;°4 -44 Wale?, nen a01414 come that h07 wro ! - s s • ;xot-1ficdu0.2z; ,v1.c:513,7!.1 a a y alft arffee * teavteet things wffne.•1 llte „i1ilia re ff.: a ' .• ••• c 1147 ak-1 12 . ,.rze tins a c:atcaD 1504)4)1244 tclne httlfA 7":a -i`•• tt'4 qa: 11,;2s ”" 1444414144,f9” 4-449,4 &rhi eholes te-aireP 0:1, W fu.3•Ira that ettarl.... ttlett, t4171trug,,g,".e 17B0 7.7•aU1710;.*111. ••••411•,*•,....0-**3.,-.A '1/4i a 1:22,Itta „he tno.ni tat as aute tim ;wet,. to =mkt, hie Iff tif7* il-e, - ins 1141449 or eau 3"1,;•••13 talP • t,,ca , enniugeeetcee, nevi tr,,, Ste - 14'9491919, ;.11° 3at'' 1Ile, masie. "Now abezeth wattIog wri ho flool vtlet*-Pt". I do itsot eel:dues mountain high. the tente. es, ;„•tle-- -tee v.„)_.-r,L, u-It70 naranv 9'44.1"--""2"*"Ii4('Iits 6Vg' atth" 1°1'e. 117,14/I9Y----1nese t tt hinh Ee etd ,gf ttler heee arr.ts,8att6iehuset -.faoss- tet1 i1 v et I h en5ikt0eyr . " .t T-l'i 'l sd tr ag tsl"i i4v r *n- 's"rEt"4a .tM• antntry iairnal e 5it tohdtn.eee teltaaterietnht.s vecn i 1 IvezTeheLI aD*,a,;es•3e 0 lt;l -e--•• ••_.'u,., 2 : Ie ,et tnels he:-' ea ame-l''4ce")eena -:31 3 'e 4 C'"4'., -, ',1't ":`::•. sL••"''•1 1 p'7e'1LL'-'' .:tI la Luti'7aa*1`v tl-*'a''1Z0''4'T 1 5 gf:i .4ois'4'f1rf n3,4I:'•";2'l141•,1 2•a4 1,21;1-:r:''*':n' 'a ,E, 1 ; :lf'k.'`2.',.;.4",''1".1,'..L",'f',-' " , ,4"1,".i:' t F4 c*, l'2%'-t" t•4lIia11•r, e esn hine, aritratea: al FoaotsiVMa ';„- .tat u51 . ' f74114"• r'' e''I'''lyt-::;;:1-:.!7g"'4t":'' 1;,A,apP1e4elle.t,t,ecceat:altea1t,tsbuttknly:etefichaernd ------e l20ro” '` "2 ' `.'%':' : ' 7'' 1zfal17;h"4ul -----------------------------------------*MudsrezVlasrghvt;2it; him omething enlr1- they :r 9914-5 1 . (1 ,\7 len,tat.-ewardsofar,Datrantie.AssalhaTeAarll '1, 1-til74"ra e E' f I a c e d r n : o fIs: f e h / f ta rstagt a t vtt-h a z t ehrae. T e t a t- Es tm a , rrene t a l o e n t t 0 1 • 7 f'.3-,•; A m 4 '4 41'1,-* t ' .r i'rP aw41 I t '9n4 $ 5 - : : - : ,.. . . :-_ 1 1 € 1 ' e" 74. -4th': e2n'''3''' ',ff"':.' ',1"1t„'`.t't*e",*,L.'-•''4" - P3' ,1 .„''`' " i„r1 ,' t'a'V ,ar feathe voUnae of that 31 1'? net way throtgt nntenLtut 550144* 11934347,101 H e443lne21ee.110x LI l''''94 14 "Inatl;41st14 '08 11 l"•t:tP':e n 41003414 143 t19 -14t314')4» odih teselve in gof ,_t,riitltn 19444' 1 tvi9.h..: 4 14r 1 'P1114 211 a Gandtlt114,4stelerEfli:elVIithtat1ai:,,,44'.w.,A.14,. i g ll S 'o rste e d a ytt v ".e e e h'S .eI71 i .ru9 stit th'37 7i• 7 * w t,vtte,thhaeeti.n t e n 0taeeece,i9- -t • •., ra •vdT•* 2 'I7a11"1,lr,1, 4•g'n44 Tf9 •"'1- ' 4-'• -72t'7 • ' ' '' 1:'f1 1 4 - ,•t' - A 1nmees 4)14 41414 oe to tmeter eavaPev tn u. • !Z17`1 . t e - e -• -et.e• tam ,actu2nil tenee beck thr 'nee uliffe e, nt t 0-,411:-(vittrems. on Trade. 1123 011.412`e.4 t11) n4t amlr,:nt 'to s.. !man teennerai Ire".tra,e anal e,'s-trrra. - " tedtt. tar-eggert.......ath.an,3I5'2 e.anl.e arg,eo s ..nloent:llA gtiovne hto a otteo.ra.91 1revec2'o1gf eIm"-*foetwffe0i„l" l4t'iti IIns 54 1 tIrro-g t;•'1'-"rin' `-"-iWff-e'n!te,e•,''1'e3a"''• ef'.-,n.te'bff,-„";,- . r,, . 42,a.„,;L11t31e.,.,...! 7th.-I.e.I4e,fp,t,ar.il., e 4 rrueaP•.;•i.v40-44ta ee.l'..at..a,; h4. 444I 7" I peenl..nea,' tt*ne.,:nttkrat.Uali Toiplee• te.4r,n0i9e-'na rvanm"goVs o vatousPaeeand eelete hmenull hee asthe 1” 0711" 14 n filT,, E4S04 •1areeence7nnanlidn a1/e 0sStrra0hseter:A; tryalt?Gadvein 14449? 19443 teending8zof s4ats 21.44,„15„1-1.v.,,.,1,,o.9.„fn'1ai14 34 thflrst li.etatle14IIba6thr4ayteaalettt)pel%.er-t1 i 1 - 4l'4) 14403 3. _ „:• tetz4s3s.911p.<,..,prf,va,43,17,i9,1224 , , Oz tee neales wed eame deten. ennen't 131 - putting Hie key into the deer ice•It in t"ne MiaS.t 0: 1T,:e Pa1afa15e of G°3:' ' Ina' more than"1 -- ''''' • - 4 -"aes "%ef:lealsfin3rlawn:BI.CJ2;:i1:':r.1-4-4.,T.:;74'+.1t;s1.:11:i. t..- !1"321:::4:''' "?.:4`..":4,"ffros- 4 n:etecrt'e'',2-.-'stea'clity".,'''';11e114 welt Illw°7..21ela ae. e.se 1.......Y,,," ..::::..... 46-. 6,-4 n f 13..7 k3.t, 4'3 if* Iln•.1* - ,'.r • 4,39,4,,44,.S '4' -f i- e •• 7 • " ' 1 't 1' ,'''''' ' i 'I'llt". In the hour of that soul's release and .jdous vexes taat 81. P,737.f, et.nr..._ . toa t.harge. . „..„ . co:7,z a Iffardiy tell weine. and the pt -,r-: tee tint gni,v„-iii or the T-rovlig, enthronement. thitre wiN ree heaven',:y I -felt h. vh'tne„ Inam:Oge, 7-'''''`'.":`'- TeaChingq-i:Te. eie:rehes are the : -ter ti At.) tItly 1.7,g,,,,44.-4-. t "Li I& .,at:- l';,,r. 1 s „did beig:,..n. see,rri wearler nen everything in his own affairs and in :acclamation, es in the roya: balances , anee, patience. go,-Vmass. I'r:then'Y Peeelous light-h'4)7f1-'4" Of 1".;44''42st t" an?, •• treeete.lut waY a Mue:ah71" etftn't 11, 414s- 'enre of Ibis NV(14,a at. T.01r011tt43 serev the affairs of church arid state art , "the Lord weigheth the spirits:* kindnese, eitarite. it is God's perpesn feet 97-- 14464'r2 .,ve 0.1 feel the previ reense , ;',,I'l: :40 f..t ter,:41.14- ' to seew hew tenet. wee inv.:nee nem tendinn, toward better eonditions until I Other balanees may lack precision __ __— power of thriet shoe:al be shown to , eel to held the snide,* wit " tie• weather gets settled donna "hit some:nig depressing happens in his and :ail in counterpoise. Sectien are . own personal experiences or under his . affected by conditions of attnespeeee own ob-servation. a and acid vapors. After. all that the But there is another man who by mu nations have dene to eetablish an in- 1-21•enIam--'e• al31 r•I'Yel" --`as "t= 311111- variable staltdara, perfect:can has nee - Sett* torr.o aniance. with the Almigenty es yet been real,he.d. and never will "Sea. Made all right by the Savior's grace, this man goes to work 9 rc.e.he the world right. Ile says to blmself: "G03 launched this world, ind he never launched a faNure. The Garden Of Eden was a useiese 2norass tampered with what the whole world still be when tit blossems nred leaves lend flashes and resounds with its cora- Ing glory. Ged will save it anyhow, *Rh me or without me, but I want to -do my share. I have some equipment - not as mucet as some others, but what I have T Will 11S1% I littye power to frown, and I will frown upon iniquity. 1 have power to smite, and I Will snelle encouragement upon alI the strug- gling. X have a vorabulary not so opulent as the vocebulary of some others, but I have a storehouse of geed words, and 1 mean to scatter his fair:lily hears him whistling a tune most jubilant. He has faith that ASKING FOR i1ERCV. the world thasstgi. IIis pc-opk. 1-"ro.li ,, this IT,IImps. of eirr6t. w ,- st.e bow v,ar 0 — Denton and Cross Plead for 'Mitt- resurreetion landies wilD .t.wear. St. i gation of Sentences. John himself says, 'lire ahnll be fike To'rout0, June 7.--ThrougL teir }"ta' be readied_ But the noynn hrt,inuc„ enuesel, Frank Denton, A. E. Cross, PRACTiCAL Still 1.1 , and cone, in ail weathers, ,.. e,„ algar tow -marten. appliee to le for- the most intffeetsting ei all the beak.; Iv:al .ana In el rad hedvelazi_ju's"t. ri'ne,* givee part ef the penaltins lad] epon of the Bible. 'Then? an> Foratc, tiengs ' truth. The same balance that weigh- SY to anallerstared. het, telere. are true to the last point of justice- and'k 1,41.:ere for co.rrupt prneteeen ie tree ea ed the tempted spirit of Adam under 1 tl,...71.tarl fdtetlarr- ; neYsteries ,vet nesolved flood are] x seat; Ftate41 that er,r,SS v4T.S a ; groat men been gee,L-le„ .i neat enete. I califf alld la ibilditI311 to ;'----ecite: lai'"d-- To their own minds tery have se04-1 teetied in unfaldiag the tenet/TY. ' wIledo to others they fail tee eon -1 vire 4 of which I speak are the same in heat of °aktillic't and C. HY5itn. of Traf- Our lesson to -they is freeze one 1.4 the fruit tree, and the spirit of Cain $000, anal $9S coutS. was die -entail - in the first assassinet:on and the : Tied from holding <Anne under the spirit of courage in Sosima, during . croetrn for eight years. Ile leel • net tie* regular etimmer cennitions. __ _ A Humor of the 14 ('054114. etteellent el:ante:2er crop prospects The usual latemerone L".n fentS were Ontario, 1494-9 the Imprevement net racking in the -.net-ff.:tie' taken fl the erne, e n In the Isiorthw 1939r119' -'l1 11' "ti14, Att 1•11P.t'ig."`r;g7td In : tae mina th-t;sr t!IIS liken Ze.annsil etnte,1 anther:ties tee ff i X eff to that hie re itlaer w,49 a "Kaffir. his otitt.'ort for 31h lo., .,usiness they un TAT. ` ?..1 b.`e peotteleing•. n:Acrahze I .%ra, bat after- Tra'fie at Las been ward served in tee Veez.e.: 1011.112Y4 :412 1:1e191A0 21.A24 Lizrg,:. 'Slap itliet he tees bern 0144 1.920 P:;'1‘:8:1!Cri- Taz- .1' eattle an 1 t..atiry proaince ar tv0.-een T;4t7.410.,ra C.-Ilembo in a neg. real>. Snaraisre Yee -eel. "•Pe.': him Coven a Were has been a very fair area -&•rateieman :" vt-ns effhlal (lead- ,et buelness done In wieceeeele eon. *lee at naralton this wee. ; 'rravelers hare, been sandlie leerldvd. forward geod orders for tI the prolonged daylle,ht, anti the spirit other means or 31$1796" rt,z4.9'2. ' r3rni Onr lesson elsea Introit:4.es to ns one 1 nel, eelet . of cruelty in Jezebel, and the spirit of laberer. was quite inlaid 1 to nay neee n 0*Weeit En', m's- ' present, sensen. and the dement -L9 -1- the retail trade Irvein L ' I grief in Jeremiah's lamentation, and t of the most 1C/S:.10:'' e'f101:••14st..r.,: in tile 1 .11- .,t"iie1,11,..,-„Itur.,,ls. Inn, A ;.‘ the $281 of rosts lani upon hint. t,a,:e Ditia. ea'.1 1 a JD t Ili''111 •ei° I t 3 I il b tt‘ g leen stinr• tween the road to Damascus, where served eadentatent. John le celled the in•loved die- - the spirit of evangelism in Paul be- 41fullge8, °A" arid raci*erali12- --- ciple-dlhe 47:1:e1P1' 1414 22044)12 Jemts ioved, . tarot men to t:- a. 73s. on men a a o ty te e er weather fr hoto t :a In ia-, ern exas a white businese. Fail tensieess boonnte I le t ' I" et T ' _ _____, __ ______ 13111n 11.1/4 MarriNi a nette44 woman. far has been very encouraging. r he first eaw the light, and the New yore. and Buffalo may mon be **Wage he net derided ?" reeked the Business at 1,V1nelpeg, which las road to OstIa, the place Of his be- connected by a trunk line of cycle Boetontae, -TIN w4 -es. sale." beamed 1 week was adversely affected by headment, is weighing still and never paths. It will then be possible for the negro. "Iley tided him out ob hot weather, ,has improved with ti ' yet has yelle8 from the right one a eeneelenalg to make the journey be- town Olt a rail." --11 eavehold Words. rain, Vile week. The outlook for th, milligram, which is tha one -six- hweels the two eitieS witlxrat travel- growing Mg Crops imeisig been limprovff• over tiny part Of art ordinary brother. John was one a the three Mercifulness makes us equal to the bi the mnth-netded rain, the fee, them in helpfuiness. I will ascribe thou.sanclth Tart of a grain. The only whotn d'esue permitted to witnese His gods.-Clandiari. eat motiv-es to others when it Is perfect startdard of weights and meas- roas3N41.4re Ing in leusieess circles is better', which also Weed on Hs breast at the supper." His writings tell us of God's love to unn and our chute- not only to love Got bet also to love one another, and that it is Impossible for ISS `tCt love God if we love not our