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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1901-11-15, Page 3AO • s. rs s • les lem.to:p.o.s.s s.s.m's 'OXIMeele,8:0:6:0:91e8t8a3:8:=8efie8:61: e. Talrnages Sermon. How We Are Affected By Unrecognised Forces -.Power of a.n Interroga.tion. CortonlaW.C11.0 0.151.1 si.m.v,mas.s.si 0.1 Washington, Oct 27. -In this dis- course Dr. Talmage demonstrates that we see •affected by forces that we seldom iecognise and enlarges upon human accountability. The text influences. job probably had• no ade- is Joe; xxxviii., 31: "Cant thou band quate idea of the distance of the the sweet influences of Pleiades?" worlds mentioned from our worlds, but What is the meaning, of that craes- he knew them to be far off, an we, tion wince). God put to Job? Have who have had the advantage of mod - we all our lives been reading it, and ern sidereal investigation, ought to be are most of us ignorant of its beauty still more impressed than was eob and power and practical suggestive- with the question of the text, as it puts .sts..(sNesi•Ws:C. 0,5 5.0.0 5.5 . ....of...-. • great atonement? Put your antagonist a. few questions like that, and you will find elm excasing himself for an en- gagement be, must meet hemedletely. The words also recognise far-reaching ness? A meaningless passage of Scripture many thought it to be, but the telescopes were busy age af- ter age, and astronomical observa- tions kept on questioning the skies until the meaning of my text comes out lustrously. The Pleiades is a constellation of seven stars appear - before us the feet that worlds, hun- dreds of miles distant have a grip on our world. There are sweet influences Which hold us from afar. There may have been in our ancestral life per- haps 200 years ago some consecrated Man or woman who has held over all the generations 'since an influence for Ing to the naked eye, but scientific good which we have no power to real - Instruments reveal more than 400 ise, and we in turn by our virtue or properly belonging to the group. ' Al- vice may influence those who shall live cyone is the name of the brightest 200 years from now. Moral gravitation star of that group called , the is as 'powerful as material gravitation, Pleiades. A Hessian astronomer ob- and if, as my text teaches and science served that Alcyone is the tenter of confirms, the Pleiades, which are 422,000 gravitation of our solar syste:n. miles from our earth, influence the Hugh 'Macmillan says that the sun earth, we ought to be ernpressed with and its planets wheel Etround that how we may be influenced by others center at the rate of 422,000 miles far away beak and how we may Will- a day in an orbit which it will take eine ethers far dawn the future. 19,000,000 years to complete. Tee Astronomers can easily locate the Pleiades appear in the springtime and Pleiades. They will take you into are associated with flowers • and gen-' their observatories on a clear night and lal warmth and good weather. The aim their revealing instrument toward navigation of the Mediterranean was the part In the heavens where those from May to November. ale rising seven stars have their habitude, and and the setting of the Pleiades. The they will point to the constellation priests of Belus noticed that rising and Taurus, and you can see for yourself: setting 2,000 years before Christ. But it is impossible to point to in: llow, the glorious meaning of my fluence far back that have affected text is plain as well as radiant. To our character and will affect eur des- tiny. We know the influences near by -paternal, maternal, conjugal -but by the time we have gone back two gen- erations, or, at most, three, our inves- tigations falter and fall. Through the xnodern interesting- habit of searching back to find the ancestral tree we may flnd a long list of names, but they are only names. The consecration of abandonment of some one 200 years ago was not recorded. It would not be so important if you and I, by our good or had behavior. Waved or blasted only those Immediately around us, but our goodness or badness will reach as far as, the strongest ray of Alcyone - yea, across the eternities. "Under this consideration, what do you think of those who give themselves up to frivol- ity or Idleness and throw away fifty years of their existence as though they were shells or pebbles or pods instead of embryo eternities? suppose one of the greatest sur- prises of the next world will be te see what wide, far-reaching Influence Lor good or evil we have all exerted. I am speaking of ourselves, who nib eworld have enema tee itingeonan our. Lord. • 1Vfy text celled Job and calls us ,to conaider "the sweet influenees." We Put too much emphases. apon tee acidities of life, upon, the Irritations of life, .upon the digappointnients of life. Not sufficiently do we recog- nise the sweet innuences of tbe wife, We men are of a rougher meld, and our voice is loud,. • and our • manners need to be tamed, and gentleness Is not as much of a eharacterietio it ought to be, and we anent sty things we ought to take beets. • It is to change• this that the good wife comes in. ,The interests of the twain are identieal. That which from .out - elder§ Would be donsfcleted critic/ism and to be resented becomes kindly sukgestion. Sweet influences that make uss better men than we other- wise wotild have been or could have been! . The Ia.st chapter of Proverbs rec- ognises, the good wife's influence when it . says, • "Her husband is known in the gates when he sltteth among the elders of the land" - that is, his apparel : indicates that he has some one to look after his wardrobe, and hie manners show that he is under refining influences at home. But rid one fully appreci- ates the sweet influences of the wife until the dark day comes and the slight symptoms become serious and on the eurface of the river, with no the serious phases of the dtsorder other calking than Nile mud Usu. pass into the fatal and the tempera.- xviii. 2), and they are perfectly ture is 106 and medical isigenuitY water -tight unless the coating is Is exhausted and you are told for forced off by stormy weather.' Flags your consolation that "while there -"A general 'term for' sea or river w Is life there is hope," which means weed. The spot is traditionally said to be the 1st° of Ithoda, near Ohl that there is no hope at all, and Cairo." the precious life flutters and is 4. 1113 sister -Miriam. It appears gone, and you must put out ot sight that Moses hadonivone sister. Nam. the one who from the day she took XXT 59. Afar off -Se as not to show the vow amid the orange blossoms her anxiety. To wit -"To know," - under the marriage bell had been 11. V. It was her duty to see whether to you more than all the world be- Pharaoh's daughter foued him, and sides. Then you realise as never be- whether he 1V43. 9 in danger from fore what had been the sweet Influ- any cause. enees. 5. Daughter or. Pharaoh -It nas Sweet influences of friendship! -If been estimated that she was aoout we have behaved ourselves tolersfly sixteen years or age et this time, well, we have friends. In our days and the t Moses was born in the sixth of Mirth they come with our con- Year of the reign of nemeses II. At groeulations. In times of sorrow they the river -'The water was there come with expressions of solace. In feneedoff as a protection from the crocolle.s, and doubtlees the princess times of perplexity they come with had an enclosure reserved tor her their advice. They are with us at • • own nese, the road to which seems to weddings and at burials. If there is have been known to Jechebed." Walk - anything good in us, tbey find it out, od along-ilence the deseovery of the and our frailties they overlook and ;irk was not made by them, but by, excuse. If something appears against tbe princess herself, a providential us, they say, "Walt till I hear the eireuwta3IOe as it led her to a per - other side." If disaster shall befall eonal interest in the babe. -Johnson. us, we know from whom would come Sent her handmaid (R. V.) -Her imme- the first condolence. Family friends, diate attendant. church friends, business friends, llfe- G.Kew the chila-As soon ns she long friends. In our heart of hearts saw the child she know that it waS one of tbo ilebreeee children, for only give Job the beautiful grace of hu - minty God asked him, "Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades?" Have you any power over the laws of gravitation? Can you modify or change an influence wielded by a star more than 400,000 miles away Can you control the winds of the springtime? Can you call out the flowers? How little you know compared with omniscience? How lit- tle you can do coinpared with omnipo- tence: The probability Is that job bad been tempted to arrogance by his vast at- tainments. Be was a metallurgist, a zoologist, a. poet, and shows by his writing -a he had knowledge of hunting and music, of hus. bandry, of medicine, or mining, of astronomy and perhaps was so far ahead of the scholars and scientists of his time that he may have been somewhat puffed up; hence this inter- rogation of my text. And there is nothing that so soon takes down hu- man pride as an interrogation point rightly thrust. Christ wed it mightily. Paul mounted the parapet of Ms great arguments with suck a battery. Men. of the world under- stand It. Demosthenes began his epeech to the crown and Cicero his - oration against Catiline and Lord Chatham his man famous orations -with a quostion. The empire or ig- noranee le so 'emelt vaster than the empire of knowledge that after the 3.cgo working ro,ortte anti inctrel and roost Leer:led and elaborate disquisi- crieltet ground and eraquet lawn and teat veeen any sublott of so!*iology or roneert hall and savings bank, where the'oinV rialnest man may a8It they ntig-,ht deposit soutO or their earn- & ituslicn not Will lualte the w:zes't lags, and life Insuranee for tho.ie who eto ellilavs. After the nrofounaent az- looked turner aim.' and hath-hou.les Saa:k IIPUn (11'1'1.11r -a nritY the hunthleet and realm end tar meats taut lecture only ortlinn.ry people. But who can fully appreciate the far-reaching good done by men or wealth in Great Brit- ain for the working elasses-Mr. Lis- ter or nradrord, Edward Akroyd of itallfax„ Thomas Sakes ot itudders- field, Zoropli Wentworth and jovial% *Mason and Sir Titus Salt? This hist great soul, with his vast 'wealth. provided 756 honsns einem) tent for dississle -may make an !aquae, that teotell ellettee it 'Voltaire. Canal %see. ne we all are at times, to aeread our holy lite -tend of avganteett that ran alwaye be an- swered by nreatterat. let 115 trY tbe hails with philozeplakal apparatus, Inc generous eeample of those men of ;I previatan generation kelnee copied inn ;ratty Valets In Cattada and the tatted Stater', stahing welch wonki ether- ulte be Ittrzlerged drudgery, an In - et intern:yr:alien. We etIght ergrame wee e Joy. to Le ileadel with et least half a 11"Y "" t" %;ithali 1tt travan1"°?'"Ing it Toxic tite donbt Mule Mei- ,I,Ifvqp questions One niwaYa" rely, enee of etiner worlds upon tidg. world:. mg end entente:leafing seessie *akar: ,,, tee:en= mother treeeee leer eel," very ana whets Chrisanernity le etealled. We an rereard the eitleat which leer abet rower Is fatty teet tes-,se van be Startday KIVA I, ItSSON N VI I. NOVNIUBliat 17, 1901. The eliildhoo4--of Mo-ses.-Ex, 2: 1-10 wrOu.giet rightcousness," but, after all, thie fajta nate(' la a eemenonplace 41stamosossissrmaniroinelopstr- bUt the soul of oteell of the ealeeeoel.+44•++++++144,4eteeeetelle. the; faraiiy was aestuated was true e. ' r ' .1.. WHAT IT COSTS - 1 iber4 of the lamely. I • 1.• ,. k.'. WitilOilt 140 LI I) L l.a.; WO by welein e" and somewhat remarkable, for it is i. placed in .the same eategory as those e• who by faith "aubtle.Exl eissgclunts and T ..1., Ordy $5 --But After i Commentary. -1, A raan-Ille name manner, simply baling the ettle child was Amram.and las Wife's name was Joeliebed. Ex. VI. Num, xxVi. 59. House of Levi -Taus Moses' parents were both of the telbe of Levi. 2. 4 son-Tnere were two children older than Moses, Miriam (xV. 20), who was probably from eight to ten years older, and Aaron (vii. 2), wino woe three years older. (vii. 7). Goodly child -"The text simply says that he was good, which signifies that he was not onlY a, perfect,. Nvell-formed child, but that he was very beauti- ful. Hid him -That Is kept Lila with- in. the house. 8. Ark -A small covered box or basket. Sue did not make it then, but took it and prepared it for ber puepose. Peloubet. Of bulrushes -The Papyrus plant, a thick, strong and tough reed, which sometimes reaches a belght of from ten to fif- teen feet. -The Egyptian paper was made from its pith; our word 'paper' Is derived from the word 'papyrus.' Pitch -"Mineral tar. Boats of this description were seen daily floating we cherish them. Sweet influences of our holy religion, a. Hebrew mother would have need to hide her child in thin manner, Tile surrounded ns we are by all tbe babe wept ---"The sight of a beautiful amenities of Christian soclety-men letbe in distress ceuld not fail to noake and women who have left the refining and elevating power of the gospAi Sweet influences of the Sabbath, fifty- two of them chiming their 3oy into every year: Sweet Influences of the scriptures, with their balm for all wounds and their light for every darkness: When the heirs of a vest estate In 1.Ingland wished to establi9h their clalm to property worth $t'- 000 they they offered a reward of 450 for the recovery of an old Bible, the faintly record of which contained the evidence requisite. But any Bible, new or Gia, ean help us to it vaeter In - in an ordinary way, relying iijxin God foe its final deliverance. 8. Faith acts on a very slender Ma coaragement. The babe was hid three Menthe and then coensigned to the ark +at hulruebea with 41 L110 11134101 tri - favorable circumstances to over- come, yet by failee he was consigned to hie cradle and an interesting vvateher appointed to note the hap- penings of Provitleece with the child. Faith makes a person wise. 4. Le surely as God is true, faith's ants, though simple and seemingly weak, lead to the, grand results. Faite gives power ever circumstances, went, opposition and ridicule, and crownthe eery -day life with sue - o055. the imprtssion here mentioned. ben v. 2. It has been conjeetured that the cruel edict of the Egyptian king did not continue long in force. See chap. I. 2'2. flad compassion -"Thus the babe fourul. n. pretteter In the very family of tho king *who theretol its death." atve tlte boa.--0,ir great cities are filled with ehildren who Jere eXpOsed to a. worsts fate than Pharaoh's de - ere or crocodiles in the river. Legis - /anon le too MAIM and set ere, and whi destroy Instead of hare. 7. 1115 sista-Miriam had drawn near enough to FAL and hear every- heritanee than the one spoken of, one thing. No doubt the child had been that never fades away. eartfutly inetructed by her mother. The stories or that world lane ite holy hilttritiea eerae in uren oer &atlas sometime:3 in sang, erientetinnes in ser- ene eoinetlines in hours of sealary atieetion, and they etre, to toe Idle weak; of my eet, sure,t Iniinteneee. But there is one star that ;Ilia te ue re with its sweet innuene..• than Ike Center star. the .X11..,yora r,f the Pteladee, one thee is renat ente lnible author calls the Star of jeatee and an- other 'Bible author rens tine aserniteg stan Of all the sweet itaitten, that have ever toaehei out eerth ti.tttiIt tate fano Christ are the ae, eeest, Stessell intleentee of tar* Itely veltoet, But tiod's lauld was directing mat- tere„ anti to nine rather than to any human mi.:dent, must the praise ha given. Nuree Iteene (lune taking the alone' tha inOther became froze three time in some eenee the recognizel servaut of the princeas ; for 1V114.11.0%r wouhithe euJry Mole t,afety with her tube than fere 2 -Alford. Thy Wages -81e Woe tinutele pale, he Dual last telly the Vrage4 which meanie her vale as the sereatut ve tine te/yall prinVeSS', bet ghe hall the infloultele better wages ell enrelag her wit ettee. awl having the petellegeott•aring for Ma and trainlag hente-Peiontbet. SPOTTED THE SPOTTER. Southern Railroad Conductor Cir- cumvented the Superintendent. "Under the old, loose e-ystem, that prevailed on mom ef the southern and western roads," Head a veteran passenger conductor of this city, "the 'spotter' was virtually a ne- cessity, but the trouble about him arid we tee told there. le floating In eontinent hoe tnron other continents no mere steel to I were ene net mote It eed there is no Gol and there er elle eemeephere Uleon the ether wrongs to oerreet, aria Ito tease sor- never was a mireeit ava that the hem:sphere. Great harveet or rows to eornfort, atoll al mere reendage to break. Hut as the oei t3m,;? ship Seripturee are unreasonable and etue! arel that tbere nevet svel be a Plage:sent data take mit of our port - abet armory' of interrogation come- altion 0.1 womeri Cdristian lancld 1 entree eabeegrammed together all CArl t° ge't back all" rNit 1`"I`te."t"cle 4121-- r, -r. `"' 414 "'"' 0- ‘-'7'-"1" Iluoran- 0 ill, tur,, otrocr ro,ri hal %awed be to- "eeeete" e" s,. 04 111)100 dna :tea the leet epy es.e. tied tallier 11 it . 1-1 tareftilio, d0.-reettO Innersoles daughter e'llneuielt it Masi. have beery nearly ene si-Nere a trial foe earinebed to part With him the semeal time as the first. captains watched! tete teener of the she w -as dooletares, sae-ins/Hee to it Pleiades fen. tare eavigatt-an tend vet by her lo Her in hie Lig!: destbettien sail in Mediterrenerin watere. :it wee as the faitnre deliverer of berael." lie was tbat ***-1(1 never be relied upon with: absolute certainty to tell tine truth. He lenew his popularity and prestige with his empiereers de- pended on the nunibee of 'eases' Ile worlr.ed up, and if he Couldn't catch a conductor knocking doe n, he was only too apt to manufacture a lit- tle circumstantial evidence and re- port the poor fellow anyhow. 01 course, I am spealeing of the aver- age spotter, and no doubt there were plenty of exceptione to the rule, but that wtts a great defect of the eystem and, iucidentally, it renande me of a carious little story. Back in the eighties," continued the vet- eran, "a tip was one dav given to a well-known and very pepular con- ductor on a cereals line leading out of New Orleans that a spotter of considerable note In the north had bows put on his train with. instruc••• t 1011 14 to Investigate him thoroughly. "This conductor was,:a big, jovial fellow, fond of good elothee, good eport and good living, and, while there was no evaleue.e ol anything wrong, he had fallen onder busple- ion on general principles. Tito eormiamy offielal.; wore persuaded he was Jiving far beyond his ,means anti inferred that lie intuit be helping !Omuta to the card', but all prior efforts to get a line on him eked fulled ignominlowly, and for that reaeon the expert ,sieuth had been imported from the :north and told to go to the bottom of the .ettse if it took six menthe. When the con- ductor himself heard tho.t a spy had been put on hlo trail he wee highly Indignant and alte considerably al:trawl Ile reasoned that tbe wonid be especially' anxious tte suetain his reputation as a.% tiler catcher, and was, In ail proh- ftilLy IT:Iv:trod to *fake up' a II eerie 111110 eat that he discovered no eetience. To prete.et hinter)t lig:Linea nett st IliallOpuvre he Annaletlp telfgrathed n dettetive g. nee in Cilleag0 and tetigaged that -eines op- era tive to cpot tit tql.,Ater. "noth mum went A,41 fluty elyttt pottttot-g, it- aim% Unto. 01 ...potter toting the Wheet-LC411 tra,,Inzig $old ns ele, of a eine:Tel-A travelsrf, Who loseet Mite. esti() beeltele at trivrtmat tpn81044 up and down to 70e. r, reel, etle inasesee tit 'IG-ele tie/ roal. wateletel tile conductor, leeene grJ,Tilse. brAa at 4 $. Mgt., lineage feeteetaise wateited Linea epring. 100 innslees at !erne alai e ‘ntt.tt.`ar tinam iseth Peariee-Denall beetelit etel Ott p elteaki,e1 in 1/4, Now to M.2., ;mese tit • funny pel•t of the earn. itietee-200 laallels Et/ea at CIS,' sheeinie wale% hal iseen in are- liercaaltell beeissis sold at 3lie. er<34 only it tn h.- At n. treacle- enesee bole* breeketaen Went to tha general Ilay-allei Iends Edell et ;apelese enperinde,:n Lent ;int tolei title ear ton ler tinntatite- to $7 aterse 'Zino sepirinotergent per ton for tlereer. me a teretty alen te•-raan Sot Ilt-One L141i (0: 11.?2‘31' teed , ii.nilrooteleg. het eiteenly eneenesd Sat pr tont. a lauds /sf :4310)8O an entirely new reera nal seet hire tnaein to te.-7 eel ton. 'ate -Wean tin / tato, elle es. Vine trEemg,t- rotatoa-Vrtg eenee. :Alt tene weet ten tr,:' 54 --vt-rall Werke troa leer bag be toad. 7117. the e nesiseete-7 %V.1:4 WW1* .r1(.41 M.414gf:'-Ptileos steady eensitrartere. earritel L13 dee al.efe to a1.1179 per cwt. teetiveee repert ;01'11 1.1Ira. mei sees lesadare Wheat Marlette. drought an Otte vide of our world staggerei when line seneeinteireleiet, Main& sanotatesins at leepe, arreots the otber eide of tier world. ehewel late two elle re. INV. Prigjana Ctr...reS A pante in Wail New Tor% eseetter's enteene•retel Ills • cora a De bee ite echo in Ianabe•rd etteet and *hater ; elte t'11.1 g ti..:se,iz pett . relee++++4• leeas ealeielefee a+ aelefeefer eferrlage, says tile Ccago tele, oae of tee cheapest of luxuries if one reckons only tee outlay re- quirel for tine paymeat of the preach- er or ma gist rate who per f o rine e ceremony and the cost of the liccese in &ace States as require licenses. Any minister, priest, or preacher of tine gospel in the Plaited States may, solemnize marriages, and in many' eitatets Judges for one or more claesee or ears may Officiate, la alt save half, a dozeu States, too, justices of the peace rutty haven the privilege of officiating at Inc highly important f UDC, Eton. In, some parts of tile United State the pers4n performing a, marriage ceremony must have personal kloovel edge of .cine identity, names and rest donee of the parties, a.nd• inasmdch tie spoil lawe are enforced in some o the weetern States where young peo- ple frequently drive long distanced to be married, the etipuletioa has on eccasiou ea,usecl more or less, incon ve.alence. In most of the States tiv witn.esses are required to be presen at tlie eolemnization of a marriag although ia some States a, single wit new is sufficient. There is still it force In. Penesylvania. an old law waleh preeeribes that twelve wit cessas snail be present, but this exec then is seldom if eve at enforoecl. Per impe the strangest stipulation of al ts that appea.rs in, the laws o Tennessee, and ts to. tine effect ilea the validity el' a marriage shall be i nowise affected by the omission the baptismal name of either part ia the Ileenee and tint use of a ale name inetead, provided the parti can. be iaentified. Any person con ver ant with the conditions prevailing i the mountain districts' of Tenness will appreciate the wiseorn of th uu igue paa.•71.so., Common supposition Is to the effe that the fee for performing the m tinge ceremeay 1.9 dep •ndent entire} upon the generosity of the laid groom, awl it will doubtless, the fore, surprise many pereeris to. lea that in, several States the law has inane in the. matter. In the old domi La. for in.stance, there is A. statu wheel' provides that the person ramming a marriage is entitled to fee of one dollar, and. that "any pe wen exacting a greater fee when fo Mt to tirt party aggrieved $50." 'Wact Iligtailti it Is stipulated thi tilt) fee be "at lent one dollare4 itr tile Walls law mean that "the r Shall be. 1143. Or any Other or greati awn voluntarily given by the part1 to mall marriage." In sixteen Stet of tite Union a. werldea couple rtu obtain a more or lese elaborate ce elfleate of tittle marriage. erte...eteerateetealaitelleetteattarliteate. ME MARKETS Trwit'sTellr*Wirtrittwrrire 'roronta ,ariarrs" No. 11.-elleeeeette Of farta proilt wero 0.103 !Metals of Strain, bade Of tele', 4 of straw, Nevem,. of eireeteed Log% and a fete leads thing liks tele: -What makes the coil. tile, bourse., The nationS of the . • . be .eme !fee ren_aer; . , oe.ee r a•,e,. . 1 , i t la. - . New yetese ,,,, .,. ...... - in bmetweet,r ti:a.n. in ,2,111eat„thentlitesitiadsel Do eon the eattne,,thrill of elenght or eheek tetehleelliatst,er:a.OarelaeataeealLeali'a-4„rar15-e2;e'lletee.-- 1 tegse In editetakia wivtero. fel the g .0.h..r, 00. ns 1,9 iji„..,,,,.,, till ritimvA end Layette; No. 1 -Nettie, 70' ---n- -- wcd-- ee ---- -11 Gcd ot woe. lent we de net neltreciate s;6the.nrseras`e a tgeOe to sel';,, eeeeete • pieSeitlente of feed, weve etiale ettleeere eee, tty.trapi. via ,,,r, earateseen 4..,;L. v.: EE ij '• in ju.Fr2,:ra,;;. 1 t,,z1..,1 rill 1 • h.; turn the itunme reee Into a. world tee ledaeh,e E ottier wor0a8 upon . • . Vitillto to tar different pates /eel from w;th Et•Tz I- t fr.. I -0 • " --* eeplain and eneourage and. elevate rouses es to the comeatemtion. it 1 toteertanif: us end tee' storms Coaled hie leonete-What mate he had envie, Tee ea:sales, r, sap way. . ; Era o ...viznout am* Wilitten reveiation to out 'world. The author of my text and that is while the eva-at ineeence what las royal pitrot_ intente,s1." uy, :1 ; never Cheese. mede. whieh do eaa refer -the 2.eilda- tankinosert tan -observe your e ined hie ann." - New Orlaans S fPlav".!:10-ft11.:412.' sal 1 froat late relreate we riatow not ; but and Ext,•c.? And 12 a ;eve:aeon WAS takes 1 the wathla 135' 1-"Ildwd and tout to the light one war:an cam= wireaver I. ,21t iirdve ite,.13 it wat4 irroves_ticla clot. ingi-riaNil, -Se o. to kee° car fort and inspirallea of nett gospel atter .Leart. the ranneJv orouto woad Vegetublet. Vista of the Perelens or the Con- evorid in ite orbit. EVeir,54 11401114.1 de-, 0 e.ee„..ei. ties alr.ady 1-,„-57,01,,,1 Leaven ., tee ken by the rirralee,- of Eg:c.pi. t'".n v:raln:45 o'T 111.3 Chinese tir the l'"den't 00 other `volit15. 7"4 8t°1t `I with luillions4 of tree r''''d dila `i Titougiate.-Tne plane 0, wieteel Atilli I IA 1 e. ie.*. -0,-,ri yi 4E:vs FAT , L eesi treela r4 quiet, entia pre. Koran of earsisenannee or car Bible? • - • - ° ' ' - • " . '1" -' " * - gee: retie," or:A:Lang -J. t;rop:-.A, bae- e. te Car's:. is not a Divine being, what die He mean ween Ile said. •Bereee Abeam wee, I am?' If the Dibie le a bed been what are tile evil results 'dr ex3- --e"(,;7, is fc't de! etav,,,cde .,, de is 'helping other renames to teet aloe ; men tor deetfroyeeee geed are seem; ,eReeteeearee '',...eetY,,„ e,„°,11.,s'efale°11, 4d..ea Moue. destiention. Do net tastrone I eon very =psalm e.,ee by nod Tor ace I --see' ee'se Onit 'ece• the tha thiege ut Ooa and etereete tin. the i teariplaieleer, the g,rentrbst gee& Faith bene.aietIon of Alcyone rind all tbe etorree of eee ewoaa eel tee agatl- eioe eeap were wends:re. even othet Stars of the Pleiades. Yea, teals oit o greet fueeee eee area ea omelet seeemer,e, aseeet .19 ter PE.11"4' hS.,sielatt ItcAttinne lowneh-, -- ortireetty.., Arenitee. 05 to Sae t vote; for letteseenteell lacer pen aeaket„ wee faleael to *-1.30 -pet11 11 Nrvs- nat. feel . Dannannta, fj, • -- .."" -1-• a."» L e oe relating it? Ina you zee anY de- 1 there are two °Mel, worlds that de- De net dare wait till Orien a:lees the rizACTii1.1.1. SURVEY. 1 taken ot .7 --lee"' - • n - e , box. SS t / ;et. Caereges. <Intenetee, b t a . .,. -.ea .,,,. un 11,,s... ., -• •-• • .... • ...,... 1 t:tan awl be i sinaneee Vri'd'''" 1: • tele. z,-..) to *0..33; per 103. $1.75 fgartilieC'rlilgo:'12nflitloetrheeer t.05t sigilsetebrool.kvill: Yu°sleidr 01'210 the rate et eur world -its r0- 1.1ace of the Plelatlee. Welea encescr demptioe or its demolition, Those now eria .„.0.1 ,e,eet mere -tee eel eteoe , So Inner ese the aennery ol aeeepla .a, as..,n., ...I ,...t.ta lorrta irmai te, te. ,t,,,.."..03. two worias are the headquarters of :on boa- ra 11;_ad is -r- the ;el.:nee-es aria i V...10 latiLl in vet -meat! nie by the Ev,p- 1 ,-=013.”-e .. r A. . , " . _ , ; ,,,,,,..„ 4 00.,,,taeo„ emaeo as. -.4.a to r -9a4 it? Do you not think that roe . s a a-kerne:et dey ie riCicessary in order angelology and denetinceogy. Prom theme the Israelites weee ailowee to , epriropelat s nt Vite° thee c0 -0--e- , e..2.vi.. nteme,..,, eesket. kat the one woeel came enriqt„ eti-rre ,,ivs,en. ..,x1.,d they neea ne candle, .rantuees that await all tee seata for - live Innoing .thela la teetee. But no repo.se, n lerent. noir:entre r;Tast at 4 .4.., it'''est,..,:a. zeil,-,3‘,..;;ri,..---s.,-si;:-4 to atelaln and fix up things t cur religion is illogical and an Ira- eleue innuence.s. From the ()thee --- --= ' - t'- lieht of the •••-• far the Lord f,,T.;.;:"2.eteeede.,40:3. iduzlif latirlSgov 116;11,11., kinhe:lr reciat eaten acnirieee to c oaall eleep ., es ; tee, calm, leage sa to-seae. - - s"" ' " ' F 31 --e- ee-e-e--" --- - -e:', ---- --. ir: e--twil.- t3," VicY)1 ;v1:7-tY frozd tile Toroato Level Stock. elarket,. were never exetedned or xed uP? It. ministering spirits, cOnie ali, all gra- v.15, -i i or pee/time upon bunoan credulity, why world rise all eatanic and diabolic 1 • e God greeth tient ligbt, one, tete s .a. , ..., were re,,a....ed w:th a. weenie eye ; • e" n,-. e . „. . ,,r , r N,G, ;tchisTra, ,,,, were Herschel and "Washington and influences, From that woeld of 'reign forever and ever. Fuel] le tile short-lived 'thing called hrIrta- „e 'n=e'''e=an''',." ' `,".... e . '-' ' Ear:at eaetle. etoices veneers:. re 2t : t le 41 tr,dt21:14. 1414.;e:1 s.0.47 *Mt as, nese() ne ,i aoraeauo, Pathetic Tale of a Mirror. hours of atop eonsame abent oee- setchers'aetfie plinked and eninient,el peeple. Tee long Exetiet. cows, 1. f: 0 enoene 132, to Graaetene ana Wiliesm MeKinie3r It --s moral night rose the power that p g < It is uot to be inferred that tine king referrea to was ignorant of the great service rentletel to Egypt by the Einstrioune statesman 'Joseph. Ile must /mite tired Itecees to tine vablic reeorde, arid tine propeeotee eoleree in Goshen would excite inquiry as so tine settlement there. Seventy sears Would not obliterate the record, of the visitatiou of providence that t ailed forth the foresight and wis- dOto of doeepit, and but for which Egept Would have been (least:tee as well as tee eurrounding countries but seltisitneve predominated Inwl Gosee people sulered. God was with Mg people In Egypt so that they In- creased eXceedingly. It was at this period( that Moses was born. Parental love made the godly joebeebed a,nxione to preserve her lovely son trona destruction. jogephas interline us that "Ampere, the fatiler of Moses, was assured in a, vlsian, that the child should not eecapt the reel:ice of the kleg, bet that he shottid beeotne, tbe de- literer or the Israelites." - 1. It SeentS there Israe mutual faith and arena] ea -operation in the home of -.Storms' father to terve tho ihUd. 'Pima aluerild it be in ev- ety home, not aimply to save the adeoadee? Ilow (tal it happen 'hat wrecked our poor world six tliousatid our reagisen furnished the thern.e for years ago, ansi all the good work the greatest peen/ ever written, done shiee then hag not been able Para:Ilse Lost, and to the painters ten get out world out of the break- ratest themes in the Adores ers. But the signs of distrees have 'lbere is a. story of a trerrok that eornes ftorn the far east Viet bas ranch of pathos In R. Annan brought as a gift to ale wife a Irslrror of edvet bronzeThen e ;a, • Von of the Magi, The Transfigure -1 been hoisted and the lifelines- are , , seeo eoteaeg & ; clfixion, The Entorrnbrnent, The tale. The g-ood Influences or the of the 111111 before, tion, " The Last Supper, The Cra- out, and our world's lease is cer- I asks in the int:Mee/tee of her heatt whoee was the pretty face Last ;In5g-rnent, and that all the consectated people la out world win =Meg back at hetAnd where laeghing schools of planting put torth their be eerettiplea by the belp from the , utmost genius in presenting 'The Ma- heavenly world, and the divine posver !ref. teOlvirllt,lieritgone othershevtiongersstI still mtntil ore, donna?" will roe -eremite the demordae. 0 3 but is ashamed to ttsir farthet eines- Why was it that \lantern Shake- ,,,,,. ---, 0 wenrien, expand your idea treare after amazing the world as be and know the magnitude of a contest will tornaze the centuples with the splendor and power of The elerchata in which three worlds are sPe- of Venice, and Corldlanus, and niehata eia117 latettstedi Prom, ell the see-ee rerles which msr text calls III, and King Lear, ana Othello, and the Plemdes there come no such pow - Macbeth, and Hamlet, wrote with his erfnlinfluences as from the two own Me:as his last will and testament, worlde that I am now mentioning. beg -Innate it with the words, "In the My only hope for this world is in name of God, amen! I, William. Shake - the re-entoreement that is to come speare, of Stratford -on -Avon, in the But that is county of Warwiek, in perfect health from arnotlier 'world. and tamers* (God be praised!) do promised, ancl so I feel as euro of the rectification of ,all evil as mance and ordain this my last tvili mid testament through the Wily merits of though looking out of my window Jesus Christ my Savior, to be mate to -day I saw the parks tea the paetaker of lift everlasting and my gardons flowering tete euaber pasts - body to the earth whereof it is made?" , (lige and the apocalyptie allieeI flying Bad Sba)tespeare lost bis reason when , through the midst of heaves .with he wrote his faith irt Christ and the the nettet thee the leingamus 01 this tiolee, tut when at last het tune comes to die sine calls her little dretighter and gives her the ttea- stean she has long kept leaden away as 0. sacred tbing, telling ber: ".41- t0i' 1 ea; de:ad you ;nest Took let this mirror morning and evening and you will see me. Do net grieve." eo when the mother is dead, the girl, who Much resembles her. Iooke In tbe enireot day by day, thinking she there talks; face to face with the dead arotnart and never gueesing it is but her owe reficatiort she sees. And it 'is added by the old dee:lanes% narrator that when the girite Ta-. (het'Iefteeed the Meaning of this sttange continct 01 hets, "he, think- ing it to be a very piteous thing, his etee grew Wti with tears," third of cxxr existence,. Although ar,tram tlue demand ramie rip el tile eystere is ,, eo. eGrateion naturally reaten kee teen durirog the ' ti EM.. . ..... wakinie inuare. thee:: is a wasting 9 reeeee.7"Zone„.0 suspension of nutriment for many Stockerateee to 1.E0Olke.... .. 3 :15 to away of tissuea consmaent epee the li do, medunn, .. 5U 3 to boars. 'The bole- feeds upen itself. 04 for foo d taken at dinner le digested at bedtane ne. Often ois restless and waketui at 11.tAt becattee the atom- oeb is empty. Says' a welaknown physician: "Mau is theonly treatnte I know of who *lass not deem it prop.e.r to sleep Toronto 'Seed aiatkets. , on a good meal. The infant instinct- eelI ively cries to b"Ica. at eight, show- eLere ha's Veen some ilterenee In ing that food is necessary during nctivity of red clover this week, that time as well as through the day, e'rfering° In the co•7311trS being at laeger than during the preeleus wil causes it discomfort, which it makes °.ther line° have hcen 5-e1.9 gelet. it and that left too long without i lacteal -Ty timothy, which has sla 2.53 tO 4(0 tO 550 it* . 31.1 to. 2 tA) to 225 to 2 ol 10- . 3 75 too 3 Ti t* kbeerg p,owe4 per e. 101 to doeoacke . . 20) to velien.per ittrad Ilataba, per eUt ea) to '3 1 Oe to rlo etals. It 00 te, Flegasehoice. p05 cwt a see to liogri. corn re 5 396 to I Hoge, light per ewe .6 374 te, Hoe*, tat, per tee F. 37-i to lemown by crying." If Yon crave. it, vat a light, easily loci. activity whatever. The oriel 11 1 staseke also have eoritinned q digested lunch at bedtime. And the „.„. it i etiovef (19 Onoted easel long houre or sleep will work out for 07,tiateas „e e YOU a problem in addition, Instead .e. ' 'e' e - et• e4::i° t° $4•80 - emit brings e6.51) to a7. Three:Shy of subtraction, of adipose tissue. The' teuable with tile bedding gen.. 11419 is that he is frequently eimied it the 'had. 3 at $2, tO $f`..50. These Maces at average quotations.. Extra, tin ,eatiiples will biting a little bigher poor grndro will not sell at ,qaiti WO a figure.