HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1901-07-19, Page 3C orkt.
144,01f4
Hot Indigna.tion at Prevailing Vices Is
Right, But Sinful Anger Is Hurtful
Washategtoin Report.- .A delicate
and difficult duty its by Dr. Talmage
in this discoarse urged upon all, and
especially upon those given to quick
temper. Text, Epheemns iv. 26: "Be
Ye anerY and sin not."
Equipose a temper, Idndaess, pa-
tience and forbearance are extolled by
most of the radiant pens a inspira-
tion, but ray text contains that which
at arst sight is startling. A certain
kind of anger is approved -aye, we are
commanded to indulge in it. The most
of tie have no need to cultivate blgh
temper, andhow often we say thiags
and do things under affronted impulse
which we are sorry for when perhaps
it is too late to make effective apolo-
gy! Why, then, slaould the apostle
Paul dip his pen in the ink horn and
trace upon parchmeat, afterward to
be printed upon paper for all ages, the
injunction, "Be ye angry and sin not?"
My text commends a wholesome In-
dignation. It discriminates between
the offense and the offender, the sin
and the sinner, the crime and the
criminal.
To illustrate: Alcoholism has ruined
more fortunes, blasted more homes,
destroyed more souls, than any evil
that I think of. It pours a river of
poison and fire through the nations.
Millions have died because a it, and
millicots are dying now, and others
will die. Intemperance is an old sin.
The great Cyrus, writing to the Lace-
demonians of himself, boasted a many
a his qualities, among others, that he
could drink and bear more wine than
his distinguished brother, Louis X
and Alexander the Great died drunk.
The parliament of Edinburgh in 1061
Is called In history "the drunken par-
liament." Every man or woman righ•t-
ly constructed will blush with Indig-
nation at the national a.nd internation-
al and immispherie and planetary
curse. It is good to be aroused against
it. You come out of that condition u
better men or a better woman. De y
angry at that abomination, and the
more anger the more exultation to
character. But that aroused feeling
becomes sinful when it extexels to tile
Victim of tide great evil. Ihruniten-
nese Yeti are to hate with a vIvI,I ha-
tred; but the drunkard you are to pity.
to help to extricate.
Just take into •eonehleration that
there are men and women who inee
were as nOrIght an e.ourself whe have
been. prostrated by aleohollem. 1er-
baP3 it eame of a phystelan'a Itees-
criptIon for the relief of pain. a re-
currence Of the rain calling for a eon -
of the remeay: perhaps the
grandfather was an inebriate and the
temptatlen to inebriety, leaping over
a generation, hae st.vooped on tide tin-
fertUna•te; perlinps it Was under an
attempt to drown trouble that the he -
numbing and nareotle tiqual was
tonight atter; reamer) It wee a very
grader/11 tletliting of the man Welt the
beverage %titbit wns thought to te
aervant, when enc.* day it annettmeal
itself Inester. Ile humble now, mei
edmit that there is a atreng :TAT:ba-
tty that tinier the tame. eircutanotante.•s
Oote yeurreir might have Ocean ealoture
ed. Th0 IWO aperepriate earietione rer
Oen. to allow nee inalgete.tien at the
intetieent which entheeltell rota eem.
rally for tile vietitn. Try to teet the
suilleree Mit 4.4f hie leeeieerat etiteren-
Merit; reeentatetnel any !wale:tie yellicer
that poi tattoo or Orel. aleeve ad, int*
Otere the divine rue Ter the eteuege
gle in wretch el Mane' Of tbO tiebleet
tine grattliest have bean trornte.1,
rifIkre attnether evil the niberretece
Of vateleto y....031 are ail eatiel to, ant it Be 1
on the intleare-the gambling prae-
neeeitt devetoontents phew,
that tette% devattatleft 6tbeteg,
tereerght in Dedieg rattler:a It tie an
evil which sentetithosi n elate atei
graellous es It is hat:Wen. Indeed.
there never Were ent ninny reeple try-
ing to get money without earnittg
Rut ft fie a !reggae:I traegreselota that
edieeee down to tts from the past,
blight/rig all its wee-. One of the
at /est men of thocenturies, Chettee
Pox, got ready for hs saneela egatest
The Petition of the tneegy ley epeneling
rt hears rt the gaoling table. trving's
fife of Olii-eer dellsinZth says that ttle
great poet iost t. a his earnings.
in a short tour te see the worn. Gib-
bet, the earner of Oleo Decline end
og the ,Irnan timpire, came to
his own e,eelitte teed tali through gem-
roacillees and fit a letter a1776
geld: "I have taireone unyseir, need it
1 to fto puree to conceal erarn 14.
ray abominable falseness and faily. It.
ha.ve never lost sa ranneh n Ave. Oays
as I have to-ftight, an43 atn Era debt
te are honee for the whee."
Can yea hear the stery of Veep un-
pelmet:lea reardeutestons of stacks vod
D f the devices of the gambling ealeen.
to etateap the vent aree nosnereitelme
Without having your use tinge, and
yeur heart thump, and you::: entire na-
ture steal -Eel witil the vii:alny? If oe,
you are not 127,12C11 of a. man or !roach of
• wareaft. You ought to be angry. Or
there is no sin ha such veheeleat dis-
like. You ought to be so angry that
you cote not repress your feelings in
the presence of young men who ale
Ouse, forming their life theories. !
evefY Poseibie way you ought to de-
neanee sueee stupendeue eptabery.
it be known that the only euceeesful
game (ln which a man plays wereoy.
is the one in which he Ioees• a ani
e tops. e
Bat who vett Ore hetio indlortont •
ugliest the eritne, how de vett feel
*beta eeeee VVere '11,7±P-7 1 a '11 1
ewe? trliec not. know the.t.
smell beat wee ee reel' .eae mate-
etrom. -• Senee of them ct-e-,A ',ern
with * r„?.111--n,,y tA ene
exnee 'et efel bazeol. They 'Omer
ited to t.•nv.....„.
lent leae:e', -en teere eleitiervel liseonr
figerneeveo: a.) ner. deriee teetir ',asses.
MaetaVite etz...rt aseein, Same them
that there are more fortunes to he
goblet then neve yet been :tethered
and that with Gal ler their friend thee
protedei enr here ani ibrouge
the Savlefee mercy thee- may reign for-
ihe lane where there are to
*ogees end infinite gains. While you
tatty redden in the faee at the fat that
gambling is the disgraceful mother of
multitunous crimes, of envies, Jett-
ousies, revenges, quarrels, cruelties,
falsehoods, forgeries, saicides, mur-
ders and 'dispair, be careful what You
say of the •viotim of the vice and
orhat you do. He needs more sym-
pathy than the man who came up
from inebriety and debauch and as-
sassination, for many such repent
and axe saved, but confirmed gamblers
hardly ever reform.
During the course of a prolonged
ministry I have seen thou:sande re-
deemed, many • of them who were
clear gone in sin, by Almighty grace
rescued. In all parts of this land
and in some parts ofother lands I
have seen those who were given up
as incorrigible and lost recovered
for God and heaven, but how many
confirmed gamblers have I seen con-
verted from their evil ways? A thous-
and? No. Five hundred? No. Fifty?
No. Two? No. One? No. I read in
a book of one such rescued. I have no
doubt that there have been other
cases, but no evil •does its work so
thoroughly and eternally as gamb-
ling. Such almost hopeless of refor-
mation ought to call forth from you
deeper sympathy than you feel for
any other unfortunate. Pity by all
means for those who, shipwrecked
and bruised among the timbers, have
nevertheless elimbed up to the fisher-
man's cabin and found warmth and
shelter, but more pity for those who
never reach shore, but are dashed to
death in the breakers. Be angry at
the sin, but sympathise with its vic-
tims.
There le another sin that we are
oftentimes called to be angry with,
and that is fraud. We all like hon-
esty, and when it Is sacrificed we are
vehement in denunciation. We hope
that the detectives will .soon oome
upon the track of the absconding
bank official, of the burglar who blew
up the safe, of the clerk who skil-
fully shang:ea the figures in the ae-
count book, of the faleifier who se-
cured the loan on valueless property,
of the• agent who because of his per-
centage wrongfully admits a man to
the benefit of a life Insurance polley
when his heart is ready to stop and
who comes from an ancestry char-
acterletleally short lived.
One act of fraud told in big head-
lines itt the morning papers rightfully
aronees the nation's wrath, It is the
interest of every good man and good
woman who reads of the crime to lia.ve
it expose:I and punished. Let ft go
unscathed, and rent put a premium on
frattolt you depress publie morals, you
inettee lime who are on the fence be-
tween right and wrong to get down on
the wrong side, and you put the busi-
ness of the world on a down grade.
The constabulary and penitentiary •
must do the work. Hut whlie the iner-
ellees and the goatee:I ery: "Good for
blini I am glad he Is within the prieen
doerol" be it your wort: to lind out If
that man le worth raving and what
are the vixen of hie moral over.
.throw. Peehars he hen alreztly re -
elated and in wat•hed in the blood of
the Ltortb. and Is at; cure of heaven as
you are. What en opeortunity you
have now for obeying my text. You
angey at the talederneartor, but
ya aeo helteful ger the renovery of
tito receiclittant, tu.J all prise% re-
fer:mere! Itieeeed ore theee governors
teed erceldente who are glad when ther
heve a chance to patdon! lalleaseti the
forgiving father who welled:Nes bonne
the prealgaii tietema the tieing thier
Vint.= tine Lard tosol.: tvitii him t
giorY. vaticing. "nig day shalt thou
tee with line in turaeliSe.:"
There is ;Mother evil that We ought
a.base, white we tty to halt, the
victim. and that itt
sratelhes the ale tereeerver front the
mart ant CEi\DUNIS' reit eo treaele
he a veer: or peane: os etteallittate.. It
evouldi extinguish ttte only tight that
has ever ilieeet Needled for the trete-
b:ed tied the lost. Let the spirit of
infidelity tette bold of a hod, and and ite that town the neatriege
relation is a fare, mad gond morale.%
give place to an styles. of butrieraist
Let it take rozsesAert of thie eaeth,
and there evonld he no virtue left in
11 the world's cirreannferonce. AUI the
ns rebtakel in the Ten Command-
ments would. dor/lir:ant. The tercel
that shall kindle the /eel:nee:ranee' of
the earth in itS last catastrophe wlil
not do so anuclin damage as v.-cuid
infidelity and egnostieiern if they got
the chance. De angry with such theo-
ries of unbelief and hatred of G.
Never iaugh at tine 'witticisms of those
who would belittle tine Envie with their
Zan-ars:ray.
Have a lightning ittyour eye and
a flush in your cheek and a frown et
your brow for a dastard that would
blot out the sun and =en and stars
of Christianity and leave ail things
in an Arctic night, the cold equal to
the darkness. You t10 well to be
angry, but Low about those who
lia.ve been Meng of scePtioisnl, and
there are more millions than you
will ever !now of until the judgment
day reveals everything. Ale here
comes your opportunity for gentle -
nes, kindrie.ss and sympathy. 'The
probability is that if you had been
piled with the same influences tm this
unbeliever there would not be a
nible in all` your homes from cellar
te)e.ttte Perimos he was La sem
Important transactien swineled by
member of .the church whose taking
of the sacrament woes a saerlier.te.
Perhaps he read agnostic books and
beard agnostic ;lectures end mingled
in agneele circles until he tad been
betercgv.d and needs your Christian
II"Ao more than any one that yon
know of. Dii not get "alto any lair -
ed argument tehout the trnfb of Chris-
napity, 1L roa.,v beat you at that. TIe
has a whele artillery of weapons ready
to ei,en fire.
Remember that no one was ever re -
:formed for this life or saved for the
Hie to crime by en argument, but in
huroblest ane gentlest way, your .eolee
subdued, ask hirn a few quest:Ione.
eleit him If he had et Christian p-
entagve, and if be sayA yea ask him
whether the old folks died 'happy. Aek
him if he has ever heard of any one
going oat of this life in raptures e•••
Infidelity and agnoelloism. Aelt bim
14 it is not a somewhat remarkable
fact that the Bible, after so martY
years, etloks together and that there
are more copies of it in existence titan
ever before. Ask birn if he knowa of
any better civilisation than Christian
civilisation, and wbether he thinks the
teachings .of Confucius or Christ are
preferable. Ask him if he thinks it
would be a fair thing in the Creator
of all thing,s to put in this world the
human race and give them no direct
communication for their guidance, and,
if they dM wrong, tell them of no WILY
of recovery. I think if a famous in-
fidel of our tline, instead of being
token away instantaneously, had died
In his bed after weeks and months of
illness he would have revoked Ws
teachings and left for hts (beloved fam-
ily consolations which they could not
find in obsequies at which not one
word of Holy Scripture was read, or
at Fresh Pond crematory, where no
Christian benediction was pronounced.
I do not positively say that in a pro-
longed illness there would have been a
retractioh, but I think there would.
I say to all young men hoping to
achieve financial, moral or religious
success -control your tempers. Do
not let criticism or defeat rebuff you.
leeedl, the great musician, applied to
beconae a student in the Conserva-
tory of Music at Milan and he was
rejected by the director, who said he
could make nothing of the newcomer,
as he showed no disposition for
music. But the criticiem did not
exasperete or defeat him. The most
of those wOo have largely succeeded
In all departments were characterised
by self control. In 'battle they would
calmly look at the bomb thrown at
their feet, wondering whether it would
explode. La commercial life, when
Panics smote tbe city, these men were
wbile others were yelling them-
selves hoarse at the stock exchange.
011•MMMIW.M.04.1.41MW
SUNDAY SCHOOL
4.0.0,•••••••••Maradate
ItieriertNATIONA1L111SSON NO. 111.
JULY 21, 1901.
Noah Saved in the Ark. -Gen. 8: 1-22.
Commentary-Conneotiog links.-Ac-
coraing to tee (mum:only accepted
chrollologY, more than 1,660 years
have passed since our last lesson.
During that time the Old Testament
world beeame densely populated, ani
the race .'ad grown exceedingly wick
ed, so that Goa decided to destroe
them Prom the face of the earth.
The first recorded a.ct of viceeece
MS when Cain slew his brother Abel
(chap. iv p 8), for which God Pro-
nounced a came upon Cain. Attain
hived until he was 930 years of age.
Then we have an account of the gocly
life and traoslation of Enoch. Limp.
V. 21; see Hob. xi. 5. The "eons of
God" referred to in chap. vi 2 "were
probably the Sons .or the godly race
of Seth, who inteenearried with the
daugittere of men, the idolatrous and
worldly race of Caen." "This inter-
pretation is now generally adopted."
-Gelkie. A great problem confronted
the Almighty. Bre was a world of
free agents going swiftly on to
physical and moral ruin. There was
danger that the whole population
would be destroyed by violence and
vice. How can God save the race?
He oould take away their free choice,
but then they would no longer be
men. God sent His Spirit to strive
with men, but they resisted His bless-
ed influences (Nth 3)" He gave them
a long waening of t:he coming dan-
ger, and sent Noah, who preached
righteousness by both precept and
example (Heb. xi. 7) for more than
a hundred years, but still they con-
tinued in their sinful couree. Noah
woo commanded to build an ark for
4.
e ieeeee
weetleva
ic'ehee:'•1,N
meat of guilt and, an atonement for
21. Smelled a sweet savour -That
is, Ile was well reessal with thle not.
Sabi itt flis lieart-Ie °hap. lx. 847
God made the covenant with Noall
that Ho had in His heart to make,
Will not again curse -When Noah
and his family first began to make
their homes oa the land, there would
be a fear at every rain that it might
be the beglaning of another flood,
22. Earth remaineth-"Here it is
plainly Intimated that the earth
is not to remain always; it,
and all the work e therein, must be
burned up." 2nd Peter, ill, 7. Seecl-
time and harvest' etc. -The Lord
promisee two signs as the guarantee,
the visible proof, that the earth
'would never again be destroyed by a
flood.
PRACTICAL SURVEY.
The Lord never forgets His people
whom Ho has undertaken to deliver.
Ile remeMbered Abraham, and for
his sake delivered Lot from Sodom
in time to save his life.
Sin is punished. "The world never
witnessed such a. fearful vindication
of God's insulted and offended justice
and holiness, and never will again un-
til the hour shall strike when the
heavens being on fire shall be dis-
solved.
Salvation and grace are enjoyed.
After being enclosed a full year in
the great vessel, the door, the
sealed, door, is thrown open. Noah
does not move until he is Instruct-
ed to do so by his God. It is well
for tat to wait patiently, though it
may seem long sometimes, untii we
know clearly the will of God. Hey°
go before we are sent, or if we
meeo before our eonvietions are
Clear and settled, we are very like-
ly to move in a wrong way. Noteli
was saved from being destroyed by
the flood, but not from the eauee
of the flood. Of Christ we read,
"Thou shalt call Ills name Jesus,
for Ile shall save Hie peoplkt from
their eins," not merely from tbe
coneerenences of, or punieliment for
their eine, bat froni the eause of
t heir danger.
Gratitude it expressed. God re-
m metered Noah. anal se, Noah re-
nrvinnwrs tioe. first net was te
tetealize that hie pleilveranete was
of aloe Lord and tto ineke a sacrifiee
to Ili=
Igvekita of future eater le given.
Goers word le ewe; the eeasoris
neentkarly avid g4 in their Gail -
appointed order meta time eball be
no more :and the earth le finally
de..arteret by firo.
o. II. Muiltolland.
1,44,
TUE YEAR'S CROPS.
Not From Sortie of the Nteirhy On
tat.iii* Collit.t
fr,.. N. 'le". t Istereepit crop ree
Ort telest t•.::it,e'llte or P
prole-etaitt tittii thstr gt
prontl-e of a tfielttl. 11 ef
grainbut ilt3 fruit ,er ttpueratly
1111111 b11 uttriit 1 1?et e The'
erop w.li aiet eal Mister
levet. Peine 3 11..iit,. tP..ett nittina tif
41 ite eerie. bees. tt,va.,1 1 n 4 be
pl% latifte. Pilaw: are a Lettere.
t p.ern, iri41E': atil re...eal fruits
iJ talti0k,$1.04 Tn a,4 Vti 45t.41:44
Ve.
;41141111441)44
11,14," crele, r02/ etia7113 11111W
1111,:o1'10‘V-.:4,, 11 lare liteeee, ereAt
Li*. it trit*irt W4t 10101..fk
bl,siivllLx r4 eat tidally
4:11 ..at tx. l:4410'4;4*A tii i1.11' •-te
Die. Lea, Celia-. eartia
•
...4 tee it-j,ists, 1,44
SVhtkx
otherel nearly eweenci Etean9.-„,. Et the eavillete4 Uttar, r 4:01 6Ititv vac,'1 t1
tain swell hal gone 111,1 vent; #lowat,
they calmty untlii it .gtlt
CD points' up. While thitl ent,,,v4fig 'at -
My in the eourtreom frettted at
he month with rage lef.zatl,‘2 tor
▪ ,inetiting 4010i #.41 the o9t,21. c-,:slky„
enttigEle. pat grlasssf wato intS
ItrAitt rerresimmttt 4ietki Dpbme,':•3.1 T'',,Sth
the rernarlt "As It Wall saying the
gentleman 1atertme,s11 tne:'
tf.Aolli What a gllo,rlions then.3!
it In the ililetor reeelIng (ime
at'slterate',1* 'We wont
ggitteer when the hte an-
other, teat cz.ntea
ttee eatite tlae.,-11. We want it :n
Ulan men and women in thine
much in church and state is t.6
dernelitiert-self-controll,
Surpassing all other characters in
the worle's biography statiolis desus
Christ, wrathful againet sire reerel-
tall to tae sinner. Witreee hie be-
Daavow towards the robed rue -name wh5.
emended capital purashieent 1.,:r an
offending woman-dentraciatien for
their sinful hypeeelley, panien tni, her
nitr-tioA. Iflo did not sroale or
tIterol as "hie ertzdesty'. or °O.'s reale
fulaltrie!--tae" but clarea ce,...eneett hinIt
to a manning* int, saying, Cinti
tell that fon." relying the. :night...est
government of the werea tee inettata
govftranent. yet rubbing his haul
bellow the forehead of the anal taan
until the optie nerve of him he
was beret sigiatiese s er.e.Yiel. ant
the sunlight has two new
tread. Zest illustration the w....111
ever caw of anger without
againSt the ahatairtati.mts
mauled and basted the e.711 -C:. its
deepest c.svern to its highest ':!:77. but
s.c much pity for the eeee'ne. v11-
fering nations that`title ...7.:t-ta to
trans:es up -.n twe weal
!tee acrocsa each other on a that;
was dark as the night: the winfews of
heaven shut. because the U.112:11.7.ta:S
COnitel /113it bear to• look down urea tine
assassination of the loveliest 17e„17.g.,,r teat
ever walkel the shore of the leess or,
eowlithomotio‘a
tpnitliarta.er blanket. s:eet c.7-1 the
Like bine, !et us hate iniquity atith
oniplete hatred: but. like him may
Ve istip those who areov,tn.t.t.....vwn
a be willing to suffer for tine::: res -
oration. 'Men. although at
• ing of this dinscourtes Q./rte.:Kt te.L.v have
seerr.tel to command ue "
slb:t thing. ws will at the ,"".t"..",, this
• sr•rmo't. with a 'prayer
"be more ritrel ra 1. 'n'!".: '•71
bAferrt'•ne ;•:„.-Try:
wh7,14!, at the
kindly toward nil the errs .1%7
so hard f' -•r taetr. rescue !II
realise that we have
tine Himalayan. height teNt.
which enjoins., "De ye emery ae,ieut
not."
IIOW HO DA ("KED IT.
"1 Clitonthl baek We. Win; Ant n.cert. "I've leatte.4 lJnzbefere.'
"Ilow did you eente tar "Drehert aellatetbette."
A NationaT convention of rogro
beekere of the Unitel Stetee has
t-illea to meet at Bailaio. Sept.
26-'28.
Mrs. D:onolitte, wIe ef thunty
Grown Attorney Denolme, St.
Thornne, fled sudlon'ey this aterning
paraly
&TU. Utz.o: Vtt*fj t bat a talle,-'2 tti.# eland.
long bee. The weieette- wee zin 1111"4,,, im,!-EgAt e • '.' I eat 131
SitlInrifelt;h“rtr ,
„t!141142'
ett L.ar„. t: 410-
1411144EUTI.,
!:itell Afs' FOIT t, iStins, 1110 1,oA.,tr
11; bete:nate ,,
ro tf2.1. , nrz-!1:4:Jor,'5-1.-j--tUe2tt
tte lin.eat eta tie 73%.11tU ol.t,-„B
• ,e , . . ,, e.
eleeta 1r,T.P11 '"1-1 1.1'1A DaF.11. •-r Lt.Lc 11ii,!..-•;, 0,1;
teneeme.aeleeil teat,. (Fee civerentee - tee *L. u" '
together te.7,,t.ta In's?Xli tUtif :".• -,." El 1,-;
ttl+EY'Ut., leetk i40
itortlz; tttiN, ' t'Oe • t L IPT 11,
fenritafitie I it ti:Ukm 011. r;i U'ir..e 14*, U•
intokera initelaing eet tho. 1,2-D q.v., 0 frutits
conn:' 'nail the wattere Lela-
01:elea." whieianecereingte Wo, 1.-',11fiEat out.
veiled treota the oattla ean loan _tee put tstrO,41..
Sreltle's tilletleuary. elevuld tie ' i7S1
ea tbo, ttottv dav,./ tth3t intim- tt.is locality. LS oa-y teeil 1
• Ora.? tittn'r en! r o. Lf 4
that tale watt re were on 111.3. , t eeteet t's.
'11 nee,: teiat: retreee N."0'IL Yee:
Leading,. Wiieeit
Cash.. .
Chicago • IS -041
Neve York .., ..... :01.01,1
Toledo 8-4 0 601
Duluth, No. 1 aorta- :-
ern ..... 0 091e -0. WI.
Palette 'ice. 1 bard ()Tab
.Torouto Farmers. 31arltot.
jaly 13.-.-Buelneas was dull Onge.:
street =elect again toolay.- .al
there was no sign or activity...
grain was delivered and the off/
tags of other lines or matinee We
small. Five loads of old 11.03r sol
higher at $18 per ton and live leat
of aew 50c lovreo• at ele . $9. Gii
load of straw sold 50.c higher
per ton. About 100 bushels of hoW•
tatoee sold 10 to ille lower a.t *le;
to $1.25, and cabbagee vivre teux.4
lower ter 4,0 to 50c peo dozen,. Hoe;
are selling at 2.0c per dozen al
other• vegetables are uneleaulge
About forty dressed hogs were deli
ered, the market holdiag steady a
to $9.75 per cwt. Wheat, 10;
67c; wheat, red, 67e; wheat,.go
61 1-2c: wheat, spro,,ng, 670; bar
43 to 441¢13; rye, 5033 °ate, .36e; _
old, per ton, $13; haY, new, per ft
t.o, $)1 straw, per too $9; but:e
Pound roils, 14 to 18c, butter, „needle
141 to 15e; eggs, 12 to 15o.
Toronto Fruit Market,
Stro.wberries, 6 to 1-13e ; Ited..ete
ratite, 60 to Vic per basket; gamy
berries, 25 to 300. per basket of
quarts, large ba.sket 750; cherrit
75c to $1 per basket.
Toronto Live Stock Markete.
Export cattle. choice, per cwt. ,4 73 to 6,
do medium 45
Extort, cows 3 7, to 4,
Butchers:cattle mekre 1 40 to 4,
Butehers. cattle. ehmee. .... - 1 60 to
enc.:here cattle, fair 3 be te
do cow.: 3
do bulle . 3 co otv
null, export. heavy, per cwt3 to
liulie export. light. per cwt.-ee to a
Feectere, ehoreetop :4 rev 4-,
do. ratelinet Jet) to 4 -
do light 3 ei to 2?
etouleire. tele) El lee 3 vie to 3.
oilleolors mid liettere. ...... 2 at to 3
lifaeng cocvs. 4.,11 t0
ttlioretf, ewe.: oer cwt. 3 25 to 3.,
00. buries :lee to 2
Io oleo 00 to 3
Lenviee spring'. etien 00 to 4,
oetve.. per toad t 00 to g
moo, choice on ewe 7 eel to
lecg-. cere red 7 0i tO e
hoge,ligtee per owe 6 73 to
(,it, per core.- 6 co to
oowe, per ewt ee ta
timed CP e
l'heese Markets.
Pint b, 12.-Twergy-threr.Ii
4t,.4.4 Iv ,etei eiseireo were bromlitt
• ,toa Porta market 1.0.-11r.ty. all wilt
:LTA .Trey All s 4.1 1-1e.
Drielittre
ru Wytril 7u, eria; seven factor!,
beaded ant) itiete. tie •efferea 'T
at t)..
t 4t t wit. inky 1120-Ta,,ret %vete
fit feetart repreeecitett ati
tam ten! yeeteethey. 'Th
were 1 3::t1 vete4 bleed ,f. .
wra4t aka 212 eolz...ired. Ilse pries
1-fo? t".34 erteenee leet Weee.
eater port fg eluat,
tat tilele,
'laviteeter, .Tu'y e tate!
ttetega te--ar
ar,P-SP reel, :.ltint at e ,,nen;
te4. Tee Pilebeet V...,?,f)
it vine, Jule the 01.
ne Iro teei iv 70 9 were .t,ffe
t!et iteena, itielteet WI 14 le
te,Ine o.yei tite lieeetel. 8011.3 a
tell./t?%.e rt? eerie
tuned at.ove Croto ClePortr3.
ftiVoQL Ot.14
,Ty'tarnq tp,',* tee tee taeaetton
Itlrtment ..ligraalture Pea
-era:Tee gif teen INatit14 A.;:itedd
ty .2a. tteea ,qtNent A43411E1 IiftJ
r
.4a1. t.Ar 1-1.11ibtit ttirk•` takt.
*;'. F. Lir4 ,
.1...2%,";. resn4litar.A tOrntlia
J,LL,.. 2, .1a,,y 11. 1.'.:„Niltt
,ta dat, era I'
ate Wattage eel
',.ette.eterat tc&II
ctitc
ps,y...,r,4,,or).•„;-,2,. 0 ans,I Ilary•tati
eaiiim.',4 tint
Lth k.,.m,1 Re5rits thee
tet pee.
Teo average eareI!.ition or
xrti.ent -inatprota, 1 ...latiatg
.-..entia, gi-e.,1; on -5m.y. 1,
orcunor.ei i2.0 one month
04.".a .1.1"..y 11. n 14.7 ab the
r.s.p...vs 'Aug •Tate tm.,01. mud a
ye.ar aver.:51ge fit.G. Tar t,6147.,
f.+T. enee. an I wIntrn, wflva.t occribi
eat ;key 1, woe 'DILL ngtInst,
;rtn"„1,7 I. Itana. an 5 ?Oil' ti;et
spon'aing en to tin 154,41
am,71-ut whoat tentai,
ti o trann 'is of farinvg on 31%11'.
ost:taatel ah''',.nt
c.r the czrevallent 404
ce•nt.o Vne .3tt rem.
Itraoist,rpen.s il`rade.
neztrai this wet,*
E.4,,tre ans ,sonle
-irot>tment tary go&Es sinee
tine czontt.., sorting' ceders
more riumieti„,:nS and the
crop rxpe,ts *
Lave had a goc„I elrent on. Tall tr
Troule at Toronto is reeling tto
rcets of thz, szasta at 1.
ent. The boil vs'eat,'Iliet Las ulti
many away tilt..3 snmmer t
caliti there is a teneleney on the xi
of a gosa tetark,:rs pestill
further hardness for a. fete weeke
Crop reyorts Trent llaeltoba
tatiforraly favorable awl they '
Der.lieg a geoet Influence ti'
Tuere still a scarcity of TrSZ)i
-
tInt tx. expeted the drop move..
the tooling tali will relieve The •
elion In that resp.v.a.
klasi,,;:fs,4 at Ilzetril:ifen 13 t'lt9
r the. seasori Traveat,rs aro tett
In many ort:ers factectee
ttleee tieeee gettit.-.en oet trataffe
t:te intei P:4rts to wit
:11,4* !air.
tr,a,:o. krivping
that In otIler I:nporta-at
tres. •at titi
lo.,1 or the seaAoa.
0-tawzil trade reports are
facnorV. Tito itunher eperatioas
bewa, progres.F4Ing favoorrnh'iV°
at the mono ts rairt"„v active
the st"..asca anti the outlook for
business. is good..
G e. eu me. Nose a,o-eo 1.1.-,SSIUn flee. 13irry iS rt.greoli
teeeeige teat...? 1131 hot revegest or ta...
grace Bri ,D1 tho, ziet c.01.1 5- See....3 S 'in thlUt grain
S.P.Orgled tO, le* lerizotten in the :Irk. ; flats at'i' fee've3.1 ant 'Prom to'
but at itengtre Ivrea rtetra.-tel wen. Cora is hereeleg utp to the
rucrey t't, /Uhl& nati that is 0,NzprF.,:.;€.4 aveteege se, Ear as eaen te.ea teue
by ha, rntavnle,...nox,,n etre lite le an exceteileigliy lenge crop
▪ liints r straint:,d-W..ou tzti gives promise0 it chetalf
(15 ' fain. It is faf.g..r bas it known'
easy for lite to reetraan the rain „ l!Nr Few przs are
as to c 111.4Z.U. ta rain. En tins Decorate,1111 V..it „ea. 1.t. ram
rietuera ekentimia:11;,....-Thrty neeet-nke .z.r. tr.
geaduelly qc,'..ntrr nrltt,11;:no.-11
4. .111contAns• ol A:meat-A reoton - trd term er,
even sr:lorir e 1 et Ity titr Artnits'ans W -•*•-.1e t'-:rocv rs cot rep t wihret itt
.. -
Ararat. e utiwtix telr132,ve rx.:1 th" 111;
ork of N tott vora•-tinnes 71'.1 74--,r 4.1'4 irq gent nnj
n ,tasthe whole 1,1're''''-',ace ,,j. nnd "dttte
e Arra: nia grumbling, 'is
7 i1ttt f 0-th- ."11' • 1..1-11 tt nd a4'492
tr2a iar1Ltt . fini 111! ont‘;‘,. ,Niagara•on-thr-Lake.-(7neee itttli
even to a any, y h heel not eev‘Feleell ' east xi4i el the N.riger.i el strict Co
to i.lra the tima win.A.--; the waters " not promise very great rct-arzr
to ntti tee arbor or ta'4 farmer tin.a fret t-
fee.--"Golea. foetid ceiel reterning."- growee. "aatlt trete eeeeptle-i or .ow
Margin. 11 old»bit w..ef,itt is vcrz... Lght an i wi'd
8 iiIe* SE"Ut foi"th deve-Ife sent tot ate; 1 o,er tee Teta:eels per
recta the eove them Vetee. ' ti.e. :ow i,fit=4..tt
11 A:: (dive leaf -An etoleati el the weeat, farreere stall te "petal on thee
• rntt1t' t44,44k4 tee v.(41 prozpnt.n.t.".•
restoration er pone, la..tweeze 01and , er, et to rez.:SP S4 II:, rea.ly rapeney
to etli • amil.fe .ei n.tfut,t -nee tho fn.L Oats. tino....gri: sown late ar'
the* aftlril* hes boyt hm erab7t-Zn 1. ,...•leenee well. bat soon tic Evnei.oy
ranee arneene all tie:Li:eel react;nittiat giVi*
7
axr 1 1.4 : ,v 1. one
eoeal merit iptc.-r .r e 1; *V.: Top -Una laert,st
it eep.are that N eelt evae 13, uric, 14.11is of el..7.-v,r vi. -1 g
it courel.....to 5, „ye"..:Z.Z% .t einys. r," n t,
13. Go feet:a el the era- N li l i averap- : 3tv
tot la aye t tIIIte. et. to ha one e Z. aZ
cL)rre,,, ii%A. et veto t et. to 1. el . ti t
W:as o: too ti tee ; saa .at wli be th" .1f or.. fen
110. Norih el CP. nit .r -Th, oth.le ho.r '
firstthaxt th..?; 4:1 aft r:Is !v.:Intel tate, an d v. n 1 o . t state
▪ r nreCaZzerVZ1t50Z3 was t tele et: tan aeptelier e the eerav Lttj
Ire teen erittlitecie 1-1 G. a whe rep. tat". e Tie ne; t .41,1 1 Le? S
itnq I S‘,. feterreele prxrservel ij ,a. 1, eta ne pa . 1
ral'i and Air,: off I s. ex -i- t rt. finnare. A 1 e. tene te, ..0 typii-,0
fie s teere oan ;le 00, •..ne..ht that rro n 41-e in in I.: tr
inpsy hod xt tars •11 crit'ein th. y lialdwins or eun gtr.eriu•is ran Ito f d
feeo,1 them; bat s bald- 1.4„‘. lw
130 riela c the ris re eni. The The retatiele .:teienea riiorfi
woof', vett eh we renic.... n'trt- sig. -1'1,s from ..k.,ennaellia. rays: tn er Asa.
parly piece for sner'fiee rnto terloart ra.e. Porto Illea hes rietee-
the " • rti-Tt wrto "unto '1, 7.nra" hr. evt npon an era of ploIrr:ty. the of-
er. eted this elter. Repel sti: I wonld feets o whieli Neil soon be apfrat%.
hove wer-tepped the ark. Ihreut of- eat. StatIstice show that 132.1 -tisk
feringc-This was "an nekteewledg- tkada Is deetning."
C.10.1, capital el tine island of I
...am., ifs s•."11 trot/Innen/iv fired
be the Insurgent Filipinos..
The etrike of 500 enate:oyeet
Irekory Silage Pa., coda ry,
rttred
by the mitort alio co
was deolarad orr teadaaa -