The Herald, 1901-12-13, Page 7Wi0131411..1.M11.1.1.0414
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Tinge Eloquently Counts Their Con.
quests -A Thanksgiving Sermon
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Washington, Nov. 24.-T1iis dis-
course of Dr. Talmage is a national
congratulation over the achievements
of brain and hand during the past
twelve months. The texts are: I Cor-
inthians ix, 10, "He that ploweth
should plow in hope;" Isaiah xli, 7,
"He that emootheth with the ham-
mer," Judges v, 14, "They that handle
the pen of the writer."
There is a table being spread across
the top of the two great ranges of
mountains which ridge tills continent,
a table which reaches from the .At-
lantic to the Pacific eeas. It is the
Thanksgiving table of the nation,
They will come from the eat and the
West and the north and the south and
sit at it.
Welcome, Thanksgiving day! What-
ever "WO may think of New England
theology, we all like New England
Thanksgiving- day. What means the
steady rush to the depots and the long
rail trains darting their lanterns along
the tracks of the Boston and Lowell,
the Georgia Central, the Chicago Great
Western, the St. Paul and Duluth and
the Southern railway? Ask the happy
group in the New England farm
house; ask the villagers, whose song
Of praise in the morning will come
over the Berkshire hills; ask all the
plantations of the south which have
adopted the New England custom of
setting apart a day of thanksgiving.
Oh, it le a great day of national fes-
tivityl Clap your hands, ye people, •
and shout aloud for joy! Through the
organ pipee let there come down the
thunder iste a nation's rejoicing! Blow
the cornet! Wave the palm branches!
"Oh, tbat men would praise the Lord
for His goodnees and for Iliss wonder-
ful works to the children of men!"
Things have marvelously changed.
Time was wheu the stern edict of •
governments forba.le rel Ow stEsem-
Wages. TI4OF_r! Vilita dared to ha, eco un -
loyal to their Xing as to :le/m=10km
loyalty too tt; ll f the universe
wPre. touni.hed. eloureites avant** ',l -
In wernitilp ondoien2y beard their
dooro ctvonot ...fen. and down ow.00n a
churolo ;o r,:.r•or,,,, a :ASIANS
thnn61 al ' F -a 'r ltitettl
"GrOAE4til aVEA'r* Thrt enot01. Pr her:-
sinr fir, fr1r.tho larto.ando, ttoe eons
and trother.o •ot Ith‘,
rt6'W t41 V41;i,..!11 ti.VAVA
from kad,ott o,;,4,••oo ot woo ootc.i.00. ,
tot • Igo t!zo r tor 't
brothe.r Coo
char. to 2-y,N !'•ot'•• „ts.o,,,, I f..o •2, IA the •
at:, • f,,!'2,,Se. 'ant
now Bo, , 2" ,r-,; t orieltiee
Aro teese 1
ttcta u r",,*•",•e.
ron; :,••• I 4';'L? the
• O'r•IS4y,'„ •
r9int0 ,
nth. 9. -
fond trl ;Er.,
0
na:•:-
•4..-
137-4.47 .
Ate'a 4_74
t. Tee_
tees
U9na-7;4u
Ig9jas: and tren:I t.:4.:a.s",o
Th e 'New Illainta'.• Ana-
*rilcnn 9:'1 s9r- t910
the, ratt2s t.n tts
'beano bath thr.ti ar43 riaten
plenty.
elo tact wanlsr th7:41.. the .3:4.....ra7777.4.se
&al the- and ;Ina Itii:77.447:::
tto rar11.-nitri50
that eiray.trani ?us 'vent- 0'r,77,4n
to the CZ NC -27a
farmer Le:fore lite. a shiE.,"out.lde..
Or that 1.222sloa •in the :14.749 ;--tcwhig
*deli tt"..eivo Pate o7.Y.-71 w1nen trae
Mantle fell car 141.4.,: cr that the 1477..,14-
.
t :.•
tiara in nee. ea:eon:an ea
as sae tilier .4.147.-4'.- • .
Pheus. the " fo427.141 same ri:la
gold rnitaes In his7,--...to7.7174.44-e.
t a en tits, .11,::Lt.tt:at:=,tc 19:
rates, "hige
there f.1.r...1.,e agre.4..119 774,.".44.
fy
the 1999e of the hir :n3 '19 '•
irreat hanyte', an: ht. ccaa.,;.• - _
down, and tiroere 1a
the z44o
In the sac:a&
sh,--47...74 of f,eints ineaa.
and the king was ..2tigas16..•19..
said, "I e- .11t eat th1s. -Ice:22.y:7r ..-an
the peorle," sold ins ',7.-2fe mos: sagg474.4.-
tiva9y, then th4sy went ILIC:.72: VI, the
71122age.
To get an apre-e!!..-..tien the
An.erietoto z- 9::.' taloe
you Into th.z. 1117.ertl
in the tlee.so forcst0 6.1a.1
Indian wigwams. With heits ef. 'wam-
pum the. aneri 9a.:4717y it CZ
deer, smoking tho:•.i.r
or, driven fto 1.7 irang.r. 1 track'
their 7r:4-n:cash-at far th.ey 'make
the forest e...ho..s crczny with the1r vend
er fee Su the wa.tars or the sti'd
-lake. Now trihes. eharenge. arid coun-
cil nree blaze, and warwiar4aps ring. a.r:d
theses liet the7Y.4.771,a172-...-k.s for tattle.
After awhile vazgor.s from the- Atlantic
coast nle to these for•7-s1s. By day
trees are felted, and bo negat Itaiidres
keep of ave seelee.e. Leg ebins rOSO.
and the great trees begin to throve
their braneless !Ts the rate of the con-
quering white man. Farms are clear-
ed. Stumps, tne znoreaments of slain
forests crumble and are burned. Vil-
lages appear, with ,erniths at tee e0-
10ws, sr:aeons on the wall, earpentero
on the houzetop. Churches rise in honor
of the Great Sprat whom the re • n5n
Ignorantly worship. Steamers on the
lake convey merchandise to her wharf
and. carry east the • uncounted bushels
that have come to the market. Bring
hither wreaths of wheat and crowns of
rye and let the mills* and the machin-
ery of barn and fleld unite theta vice -s
to celebrate the triumph, for the
wilderness hath retreated and the
plow hath conquered.
Parts of the country, under indus'tri-
ous tillage, have become an Eden of
fruitfulness, in which religion stands
as the tree of life and educational ad-
vantages as the tree of knowledge of
good and evil, not one of them forbid-
den. We are ourselves surrounded be,
well cultured farms. They were work-
ed by your fathers, and perhaps' your
mothers helped spread the hay in the
field. On their headstones are the
names you bear. As, when you were
boys, in the sultry noon you sought
for the harvest field with refresh-
ments for your fathers and found them
taking their noon spell sound asleep.
under the trees, so peacefully now they
sleep in. some country churchyard. No
more fatigued. Death has plowed for
them the deep furrow of a grave.
Although most of us have nothing
directly to do with the tillage of the
soil, yet in ael our occupations we feel
the effect of successful or blighted in-
dustry. We must, in all our occupa-
tions, rejoice over the victories of the
plow to -day. The earth was once
cursed for man's sake, and occasional-
ly the soil revenges itself on us by re-
fusing a bountiful harvest. I suppose
that but for sin the earth would be
producing wheat and corn and sweet
fruits as naturally as now it produces
mullein stocks and Canada thistles.
There is hardly a hillock between the
forests of Maine and the lagoons of
Florida, between the peach orchards
of Is.iew Jersey and the pines of Ore-
gon, that bas not sometimes • ehown
its natural and total depravity. The
thorn and thistle seem to have usurp-
ed the soil, and nothing but the rebel-
lion of the plow can uproot the evil
supre.romey. But God is good. Now,
if one of our seasons partially proves
a failure the earth se.tons to repent
of it the no.•st. summer In more tenni-
licont supply.
Pralo.o Clod for the. greet harvests
that loowe been ro.apecl this last Yuari
Ozome. of them. leshored by drought or
inueeta fr, :tots, wore not as bounti-
ful as usual. others far in exceos of
what have too,er b...fore hem gathered,
1?2,9t a will loo,lp Ionize
ono for stn - rolr.,edotoppl,y.
t.4 -In of aforloultroont pro:T,Nrity
have In t th.ot ettott ;and hor.:-..eo
ttn4 Volne and con foroa AP1.
ourixo.t tiou, tail two YeAr41
cagotc. Twonlylu
,.owiroe yoeor,
roh 14t. noreannotso
ating 1 tLr^.oz Imo;
.J,'Th•1:4 of tt.n.o leat0000.
StIo' i 1 nfr thu an,1,:soc.:1 ttotiv
? i9Cl Ciavor
•
sesa ee, e 1.7,1 N..4 441!,`, uu
P 7,-77:4., lot 711-7
747:734
• q.,L 4n harota--e.
1,3 t,
• • 7 t39.C.`rgil.
44_ 4:51.9.- 47i.,7".4-41
7,7f To17.21 vfaIn
flenn041.44.7.
111,.; 117:11
01
5`4.A, al:L1
-4 "omit 9r.:73,a Qt7.4.tat.
-,..4r tiran
Lan141 I's
1 V .ard
. (ltrA Par:s t.:473
19. 1111 c7.47.3 •",,--"prata and
14 aa.744.,..11,V,•,-----"47ati are hut the long
tract441 of the haintra.--r.
the lhonow.F.:1- evcrYv:Tc.sre
To•Le.- dweil-
Le ,f.L.:0;;;:i.. E.1124 orarozo and at.T.Stl...
US.
and osyinnis have add...A addition-
g:ory the ,:cut,77rpr0se well as
the toen•aStt!,..w.e ati the American peo-
-"-. Vast public work.'s bave been
bridges bare been built
trilVer'S e91011 tutontls dug under
.,:tonotattAs, and eloutuhes of matchless
btaurty have gone up for100ni who had
77-•:71 tvio-ra to lay Ins head ar4 the ea
theory is attptoded that ros,caus...e, 01tr11rist
vias "horn in a 1,.,..:ImgeT we must allways
• •;:.-4.-rs"47:t, lItin in a barn.
a4ls of fabulous :length have
a o....1.rapieted. aver which western
n1S:11 7,..C1St the swift footed floe;
:Ling. the frightened hirds to dart
rain the at the cough of tee
smoke 7.4"...9.,,s at.43 tha, oavage yei3 of
• the steam whistie... In hot haste
nr'advanes. her breath
the air of int -Laces, Liz song the
rna7:7;t:77..74-4:7:1 f'net cries, her foot-
s -Y..? th.e. 1-17:7471: r.f wheel br.,:kets and tbe
tread o•2 the shaft and, the stamp of
Talk *tout antedihwian
2.1,,ogevitl,..! I think the s.verage. of Ira -
man life C.s. more 2:ow than St ever was.
7hrongto mac:too:Seal fact -Ages raen
work se ratch fester and accomplish so
much.morc.,, in a lifetime that a man
can afford. to ,dle now at forty years
- as tall tie one of old at' CS. I think
the average of human life in proint Of
• ',"`7.-rit is new equivalent to
ebeut See years, as near as I can
catiate. In ail our coonpations and
r.rofs.47.44.1ozs we, feel the enrect of- a criri-
pied or en..arged -mechanical -enterprise.
ail have stock In every hus that
Oa tulided and in every roublie convey -
ant*. that Is constructed and in every
. ship that is salted. When we see the
hard-working men of the land living in
toinferralile ahc..los, with luxuries upon
tiler tables that once even kings could
not affor& having the advantage of
thorough educe.tien, of accompi:shrnent
and art. we ere ell ready at this sea -
zoo to unite with thorn in praise to
God for his go3anees-
, Now I come to speak of the con-
- questa ef the pen. This Is the syrr.hol
of all intellectuality. The painter's
pencil andothe aculptor's chisel and the
laboratory are all broth-
ers to the pen, and therefore thismay
be used as a symbol of intellectual ad -
vancernent, There are 'those 'disposed,
to decry everything America's.. Having
seen Melrose and Glastonbury by moon-
light, they never beheld among us an
Impressive structure, or, having strolled
through the pioture galleries of the
Louvre and the Luxembourg, they are
disgusted with our academies of art.
It makes me sick to hear these people'
who have been to Earope come home
talking with a foreign accent and aping
foreign customs and talking of moon-
light on castles by the sea. I think the
biggest fool in the country is the trav-
eled fool.
I3ut, considering the youth of our na-
tion and the feat that comparatively
few persons devote tbeinselves eatirely
to literature, I think we have greet
reasou to tiaank God for the progress
of our American literature, As his-
torians have we not had in the past
such men as l3ancroet and Prescott, as
essayists Irving and Emerson, as jur-
ists Story and Marshall and Kent, as
theologians Edwards and Hodge, as
poets Plerrepont and Spragre .and
Longfellow and Bryant, as sculpters
Powers and Crawford a.nd Palmer, as
painters such men as West and Cole
and Inman and ICensett? And. among
the living Americans what galaxies of
intellectual splendor and power! Ed-
ward Eggleston and Will Carleton and
Mark Twain and John KendrIck Bangs
and Marion Harland and Margaret
Sangster and Stockton and Churchill
and Hopkinson Smith and Irving Bach -
eller and Julia Ward Howe and Amelia
Barr and Brander Matthews and
Thomas Nelson Page and Elizabeth
Stuart Phelps and William Dean How-
ells and a score of others, some of them
fixed stars and some meteors.
As the pen has advanced our col-
leges a.nd universities and observa-
tories have followed the waving of
its plume. Our literature is of tavo
kinds -that on foot and that on
the wing. By the former I mean the
firm and sabstanttal works which
will go down through the centuries.
When, on the other hand, I speak
of literature on the wing, I mean
the newspapers of the land.
How things have marvelously
changed! We used to cry because we
had to go to school. Now children.
erY le they cannot go. Many of
them eau intelligently discuss polit-
ical topics long, before they haxe
seen a ballot box, or, teased by some ;
poetic muse, can eompoee articles for 11
the newspapers. Philosophy and as -1
tronoruy and chemistry bave been se
Improved that he must be a genius-
at dullnees who knows nothing about
them. On one. elielr of a poor man's ;
library is more practical knowledge
than in the 400.000 volumeof an-
elent Alexandria, and educatlen '
poteible for the most loudigent, era
legislature or congress for the
loot fifty yeans has assembled whilooto
has not had in it rail splitters and
f.o,rn'oct's and drovers 4ar men wipt
have, be,:a aoeumosned to toiling witoo •
the hand and the foot.
'floe grain fields have paoced their
Waves abos.te tito.o veto of &wag!, 2
and The lirelo,olat ears are n•
large, onotteii to bring down VI"
, Pr,d 4'. to the 'too:obJard. Tzte vao
11-:eatto are erowdyol with brxt.istoni
liar% to the ruShing• or the 1.3oo;
' tior.urtto the ftneat. cado,ago 1;:ora
vat oo-o,•9 Hark to the roltinft of '
looyootio o -of the (212ititon otli 9
'01741-a0 il9911ugt.4 to eat. 06t1 6.it 1
,to_h 0119
0.4 0°''%-
-,“, ti o; tl '71-01,14,...71.
thy. 192 tn."! C.14-910. the Ithool: t
ttAno coot 1.0-;:t on t:ran ;
9 trw., 0 11 ,917 ato-9 104 r4
1:r 7, 9110 tio fat; at '
:nO V.:a "7177,75,40* _nil tie . ".
_ 291991.2
•91P ane 44_
r.. ht. 991 1911-19. ai•17.7,o
'191119 -L 19900.9 19191-$'+2."..V,11
o or z.t...e ,19-1 ".
tho? t =
toe v.- 12L: :.:-1"
..
41.4
taii4nae199 t94-4,991 r.ght 01.91:,
that tat: 94:417
L-4•47.7-.•;:.•ta t1.4
ton tattonn
"drunhenness t,...s2ocia in then.:
to as lir the Iroarco,,sts 119 0'e:19
them: Woe to us for the
ow •
Stipday Selioolo
nomegagreAseliSNAL. LESSON NO.
laffiCESSIBillie 15, 1901.
The Passover. -Ex. 1J: 9147
Comraontaryeal. The Lord spoke -
"The work of redemption, the tv-
poinineent of the fawn, the change
in the calendar, were all divine. The
Source of till avas Clod, not Moses."
2. This morith-Abib, or Nisei! ;
corresponding as nearly as passable
to the last half of Marcles wad the
first half of April. The Jeovisla
months began with .the new moon.
Beginning of montlis-"Tho first not
eal.y in order, but in estimation. It
load formerly boen rue seventh ac-
cording to tho reckoning of the civil
year, which bog'an lo Soptember
and which continued unchanged;
but from thie tone Moth was to
stand forst in the national religious
year.
a. Speak, ete.-Throagh the elder.
V. 21. A Jamb for an nouee-" A kid
might be taken. V. 5. The service
was to be a domestic one, for the
deliverance was to be from an evil
threatened to every house in Egypt."
4, If the housieliold be too little
-`"That is, if there be not enough
persons in one family to eat a
whole lamb, then two families must
jointogether.
5. Withoat blemish -That is, en-
tire. whole, sound, having °either
defect nor deformity. This was a
type of Christ.
U. Keep le up -The Hebrew implies
that it was to be kept with great
eare.-Cook. Until the fourteenth -It
was to be separated from the rest
X the flock four days before the time
of sacrifice. In the eveuing-Liter-
idly, 'between the evenings" ; that is,
from the time the sun begins to de-
stine to that of its full setting, say
between 3 and 0 o'clock.-Edereheine.
7. Take of the blood -The life is
In the blood. This typifies the blood
Dr Christ which was kihed for the sins
a the Nvorltl. Serike it -This was
done by dipping a bunch of hyssop into
the blood. V. 22. Two side posts,
itc.-This was done as a mark of
safety, a token of deliveranee.
8. Eat the flesh -Undoubtedly the ,
feast had a phyeical purpose. Tee
loirectlites were to inert in the
die of the night on a long and weari-
male journey : and it was important '
that they should not start fasting.
-Todd,
9. Raw -That til, unfit for use, and I
therefore unfit for representing spir-
i.ual P11142tylnent.-.3furphy. Seddon -
Bethel. "It must not. deprived or
alis portion or iti) vievor." Head with
140. -Sec it. V. Not a hone I
was to bo broken.. This poixoted to
John 'Nix. 30.
11). Let nothing of it remain -The "
111.1) wtw to be eaten, all eaten,
eat:,a Lo,,;• all, and catou at enco. The
1.ord Jeeas is to be ree'4ved into
t.00.: boa1 ti.:3 its food, hnol this 10 to
b 4,10911e wotio a wholo t•h..bot, by 4' :.04
:LIS people:, ant cione lo,$t now.
-,•io.orgeora.
- 01. ti.rotol. etc.-Ditry preparatton
11159.1 too nowd-o• for an Ounnonoacto
Port -arc, long, il0w11n9 ragittj
kqek! girded around tho,o
0.,1? W..ra Or'
.191 11V4 • rt,t ci,on..od too 19911 I, et.
4911i 111 - tr.1te.0o•37"0 :Auld tv,oci t51111 0
inatii. lar.truktAKIJ ore 11,11-
4411 te4., e34.V1.4 to upp.y.' nal
tio. 14ao-2
tE-4,74 itatin.!
do,stroy91114 eseec. it,i'y -a 1
t."%...0 th .,'11e.lx: 7." ts: th7:! lo ra4744.-ate.
made 51 sharp turn by the commend
of God and were led southward bill
the pillar of cloud and of fire, which
here firist appears tote tireir guide."
The Lord leti them to the ehoree of
tba Red See. When Pharaoh saw the
poeltion 'they occupied he took 000
ehariote and set out to overtake
them, 'When the Israelites saw' the
Egyptiane they were greatly terri-
fied, anti wiehed themselves back in
bondage ; but 'Moroni erierl to Geri fur
deliverance, awl the Lord eausea the
sea to go back by a strong east
wind, SO that the Ieraeletes went
throng,h on dry ground. The Egyps
tians pursued them and were over-
thrown in the midst of the sea, ancl
"there remained not so much as one
of them."
prtAcTicsli SURVEY.
After centuries of delay the time
has come for God to deliver His peo-
ple -from the hand of their enemies.
The asions of the exile SVMS accom-
plished in making them a numerous
people, despite their hard servitude
and cruel taskmasters.
The ten plagues not only awed
Pharaoh into consent, but caused
Egypt to fear a people for 'ivb.om God
should so signally display His power.
The lamb AVMS a type of Christ, and
became, both a sacrifice and a feaet,
pointing TO Him as our sacrifice for
sixi and the soul feast of which be-
lievers eternally partake.
The blood had a definite use in be-
ing sprinkled upon the lintel and
posts of the door.. In that none of
it toueliticl the threshold, we see the
sacredness of the blood, a warning
to ell men against trampling under
foot the precious blood of Christ.
The dean was partaken of by
every Israelite with his staff in hand,
Ilia loins girded, and Ids shoes on his
feet. They were peculiarly pilgrims
and strangers. So the recipient of
Christ is a pilgrim and stranger
bound for another country, and real-
izes with what suddenness he may be
called to go thither.
je-d'"_segn"P__e2g1122F2id
Four Good
Short Stories..
ad-scdRZ""aa's
"B -h -but," the: k tibiing
man Wleo tithed '6%1.1,0.111g las, ea
elver and anon stootilx4 phauce•
the door as if calculating tile 1.
bor of jumps Ile would have to'
too reachAng.it hastily, "I never 1.
ed liquor in my
Daniel Ciettenhold 100.k.011 1.4)
suddenly awakening. interest,.
"Olo," he said, "'mover drank a d
els?"
"No, ter," elareroce Darlington
plied, "I do not know the taste
the nasty stuff.'" .
"'Well, but I k.uppose you smoke
chew tebacuo. Tior•Ill'S more halal
don't ohowin% A
that chews tobacco, is--"
,beg velar pardon, sir, but
have never useri tobacco in any f
I never have even sweued a 0
ett
"Ern," her father anewerecl,
you swear like a trooper, someti
bet. d'donv, if thkre,s anythin
hate to have, around the house
a, man that swears. Swearlo' 1
habit that no--"'
"But I have never uttered an o
, in all my life; I have never tol
! lie, nor Raid a. word that svoul
Iashamed to have any lady boa
"Oh, bother it," the old mccro
I plainecl, as he reached 10 his poo
I "here,s a penny; run out and
1 yourself a. stick of candy and d
bother me any more to -day.
busy." -Chicago Itecord-Bieredd.
E mARxETs
7r7rdand-FI'ddirilrelred'Prnarr"
Toronto Warmers' elerleet.
Dec. 9. -There was a fairly go
market on Saturday, with. prie
,generally firm. Wheat higher f
the .best qualities; 500 bushels
white sold at 07 to 79e, 1;AV ha
els of red at 07 to 77e, 1,000 bus
els of goose at 603, to 07e, and 1
bushels of spring at 69e. Bari
steady, with sales of- 2,900 bush
at 5344 to 02e. Oats continue fir
there being sales of 1,500 bush
at 413 to 49e. Itye unchanged, 1
huehels selling. at 50e, and pe
Steady at 791:, !Or 100 bushels.
"Errul" said the irritated barber 1 of 25 loads at $10 to' $11050 f
l Hay a trifle firmer, with sal
" r. 9 easy enough to grumble! Didn't i timothy, Wel $7 to $9.50 per t
pence?"
more do you want for three -half -1 loads selling at $9 to $10 per lo
1 slice the hair off your face? What
, ! for clover. Stravr unchanged, rot
I Dressed hogs are firm, selling
"Tote stubble has been removed;" i sage to deala per ewe,
ramonetrated the eustemer, "b.u, t
Leeditta OViteat spat -hots.
with a largo. amountI, me c . 1
Following aro the olostnr, cm
" Well. what of that?' demanded 1
tions al: imparta,nt. centres
the. angry barber. ••• Didn't I daub I
alum on that go -hi in your t,ar o cl ;
••! rocow York... ... 6. ". .......... er,
CaFir. ma
" You till," said the exacting cos. I. ,,,..
t°'In` Ic'lati*.t you eat toff the top of nay 'r (-714-`11ra) ... - $.2
-
iTooecio... _.,... ... ... ... 83 S'S • S
l 00"8%,,t'.;:t1 I pasted it on with er•sirt- ; 1011113711, o. ..,1., .N..o.f.thiG 3.11 7,a 7
iplo oto r."
. "T.Ile eitsoughe Bat 5.4u . 111744,r.-741 4.114. 1' Dulltili. No. 1 hard793-1 .---
1 ling11,..r1 Live, *.ttek ellierlset
of me k"3.'t NI% AV.."'
' .. 1 I,: est the raror out t f your eye. 1 1.11191 moo!. D -e. 'Z. -Cattle are a
didn't i'.."
" Yon cll." i eltangcst :at lt: to -1,"2e rer lb. (tire
ed we -411214; rt frt4erotor beef is 0
" V. 41, you are Lard to fattoly 1 : pet, HA.
0.441 trly a 1.44tt.05 1,,,,,z,,,,r. awl 11,4, 4 T oronto 1.1,9°0 Zito:n.5 Zia-Dtetoto
y n*hl • to :6,4C3 1,1 it.4 MANN a heard •
roono.no r. lord ,i.00looll.: hog noq b:orbi vs. i Exr.nt ca•oe kr" - ., - '0 -.
1"...a'ri. tea, Jul ti...44;e r.now, that ti 1111'914U35 . .4.- :4.'9 D.I.
' %%WIZ A ::44%. re19941*,. '4.,‘.1.101001 x31'5 :99.' o.,,eJ.!.:..''tt,',.:,:d.;4714..`,.,;,..T..-...". i dd
'ale 'a asels '.lx 11 e.,1 tih,:t 014 t: at:.
eatoo!: .1,0...11 WilY L:4 41164 .0,11......,'ilt- *le'.
44.10" ,-'.::',i'lv....:14, ..< . , e..•...... 0 6' ,
2 94
f. .,--'......"
.... .... e 'j ::'., 13
A dIrendldisa 1.: 1r : te-on won 1 itto to t 1.1.99) '''.'4"...12.00l'' . '.:.'...... .: o.',..,, ti ..,
mu no.ortl 41 a !ountavoloo ooAo,4.: Ice-,
la thu c:71. of :2. 104' 14:: a .4. 'T. tmi 1,'"', .;:' "t -i--,0-...4.. .4 ..•0 ,...... 54
1:..,,,i,.7.7n, I t:,..iit.,:::..... i.43'.; ! to il
to...a no ,!.or, !...q,4 .. :.,. y.,,. I Oa . ei,,,v, nor; -,-zo ii,..1,,;,, '•):--- , . '- - -," .... , t ,,, ; i',.40 .,
, easseasen the 14foC:41=2o..
q , - • , t • •
It.9LA
11....-14091.4",, 099
94119' .74491 1.117, ft 91.41..411514 54 91A
. 9 it
L-91P'l T,•-••• ti 191,c, -
no Of: 4 r wore
.91799'94:'•J 110 1,4.1,91.7
11.44. 2'1.(747914.4 9.: 99-.92k11'
W91 115 of 991 ' 1130
rova, 991a912447110.4'..n. ut
...• '
&tail *91,1 t/i,"
11. Ti40 4,7,-.7y 444. lac
11.1 9.44,-•-1744.9 Ln
ttrs•un 1)e4,4
Lt..; 11191 01S140:',-t1-•.r.r..,y, a
0111! 1 -'it 11991 t-0 0011
511:911040, an.7 e919alwa91774.1 11c:t44-499 9190911
joy tio 147,tag a4; thay roo.
maimed t 4lo409ost .."on cr.32-
00999153--"I11. was an lastitortton
- t000i, end was relt.lcer to he aiterei
nor set asOde by any Intrumn author-
"
tng er-M.P.• deZatt&IISg 5.9 09-. .. t. tut off-"TS...nre are thirty -sit:
: safety is in more 535.11158, naore rearte.4In crWoctio 72ole ensthet off is
'more free schnols, more goad 979114 anol tit,roatonod against tbo d'ows for ne-
'•.' traore go2i rem -n, Looure g:ttzt of or,..mv, par1:me:117 41179,4.7
printitg. pres_sto, mare of the g1..74:1Y918 ltl.Ar; hOy coutoves.o:!•;tion-"Th., topo-
. gospel of the San of, (100, wh. 19win pin wcro voltfod to90,-,111. by th4..
- yet extirpate all wrang,s and introduce 1 of trutoonets "to attend the rites and
bi!e78ednecs. I ortilroo nee s• of itiviine worship." ttcol
o 1 is a ittiv ?991r7 'O0 vr..uot. toe worshin-
fO
11. But the preachers est Thant`-wgIv-'2
r the cities hi Inivrta:e
theral Woe te tne 1and Clod.
9
-
444114 99934541S-1'!490 ?91'9U'1.
tracriaing trni not detota II P711.
sY:rineate. their hearers from ate 17.4..m.o Tilts 891t,908 191 be sn9y nnotb:'39 1199s870
for the, fe.tst of the rat.s.st,er.-11199.
xilh. 192,
Lescintr 27,9:9'j5)0-41- 0 sur.lonsoll lihnt
Mone-otot to, son ot- 194:55 s's It.. was
1191' 700 rat,.'h tar the lin 41:nsa Aiter
dOStraYall fatrr;tml p91919 -a..7 I trartoaa's the
hind! the Ista .1.1t,r4; were nrar,1 la
leave; veer, roo.,2y. :In 71 tho
grest lococt (.7 pro.Tetotl na- than
2,663 6 ,1 80711:8. 5t-4.1.-4,11C,Z
rocks0 0191":.5. 13,,,..9:15 70 tioDVi". 1120
once. The first ,"co-grn,no- •tv-38
Ttnices,,,,s1591 SuPc Tir;r
99/919191 '.91:5-
7200 was Inthntn. "room 991719n711 they
geesap. Tee faosieekeseees sse.. ,
P;rY if the guests 47., not nr-r.v.. '
the viands ore cola. ,Vet 044: cita:ro!
to the e.:91:.6.' for
gr:.,......7447•2fathsranll gran:Imo h 99 they
'he sir: alive; the
Youngest hut not 'the
'put vat han3 791 *nine, 1I793
.V.114 t4 thairing. L9$t:t
• bring it toward you: 'your '
tremhSing wtth v.: aril
the ch.alloe sil^er oen91: -11 3111110
tr:erile 3 few. drors •.-ra thy, to io 4,a
• not he *distur-oed. hat "..et
to you 'the words of the r.Fat..:-.t".00t. and ;
teral you thankfully 993 say. " 9'"-Y ouP
ruranath over!"
W ft' ro: AND
"I thought he throatened to coM-
mit sIalcider
' rife dliti try it. but the 21.$ot. missed
"Alit! and so eh! hr."
Good natere 05ono of the rtobe.st
fr;olts of true C9tt4,1i591111t5..--.G.
BJerher.
•
31.oria-Nclutt's the matter. Willie?
; Di•tret you have, a good time at the
t 'party ?
Willie --Naw I
" Why? Didn't yoa gct enough to
4
" Yes; but Idieln't get too raueb."
'The world le full a hopehil anal
, gist. and banes:env.. erfei 994 •eggs
p.oesibilities.-Georae Midts,
:It was hard to keep her temper
For his conduct made loer wino%
Yet she kept it -idem semenr--
She's displayed it ever kinCO.
1
114
,!35 oosi.
,14.0.1.410
. -4 r,v+, e 14 t0 3
tlk!, ru •, ear te 4.s0.- e d
uff tri,41. .... a!,
„riu ao
9 f t".",o
39 s79 4. 1 rf • q,"
01L'..17 n.t. 0, • 193:. . T,I1
1!•ii , e " ,.
554
111,-,"11'11.6211 q-•:1'.7notot 97011 ;
on 0912.1*00,
ti,.• 9.0:291 o•,! tot 2 2, "Ett:
1:1!..see. ...1„3 44,t,
;v., 4 an 4 rat'. 7...0
to) 1:7 99.1 ., i. ea-. _7'
D.. '•
iq .42 119111
ha-date :of 71n91.:tat:74s Y.,T. oT.•.,,rh-
shiros91911 09911 •tv4-11'91
sawIng 1.6;11:1.n.14 9 On aiarst.
II:might 045137 0114" 0714 ff.-bow, wino
app ar d to be worklim tas itoo.47d
tag attyhody, had not toza...la 7.91 show
for his labor.
Appa-ocien.nr, him, the att entrant
SCPAti co-.corA the of titos.
The e,cil man trad turcrid lolls saw
599199-1)199.o 91511W90, with testia in
the air, and was warkir.g, asray
witi-j toe b.xsi 5479 line to
`1041"...„ I Salv. rArgariced the
90t7r5t14.913., `-tvliat .5e113 diolan,'?•
navcr cut tris waod
l'AF-12'41V1fi. Tura OVVEr..."
0191- man pAOS:a 958191 stared
eent.einptumasly at the attrantant.
ta iver try a saw 799991 119915?"
11.747 5114211, 22
no," rezollel the attend".
tint. "s3911 ooz.:rs 0havca-t."
'1999zn 14.910 thy noise, ac.....a." was
the instatat r4.:Jo11t.h.r. '-irsc tried
I Itor, an...4"--Irapres-
sivtly---"4:-.174's is 71' easleet."
"No, *Ir." sali the o012 gantl7annata.
0.1.3 104f:SWn tard an
deiffs., Ll front er Lira. "1 wf.77I ce.vor
consent to a -ay 7777-74,74.4.7..tco-"s 014c,..mhag.
wife a/ a Elan t1E,St'S strartg
Ll
rek. .90_.:'.4
11 04'9I491.tt 11114 1595
A 114=1
t. 95
.1959111191910 far
11491910a7 r,.? the la
nadoclitii9911 tlit.s in-ala447,e5 to Oho
114 5474.1.91997-il910 in many tiepo
ments. Tio.:7:-77" have 111cs4ai few it
9.s.9 SO% and ittor. , IL* 90 rc.rir.ng of 40
frultorso,to on the 03391919-e... Tao fine e
treattaar Iterpra trade in a Who
sale way- at Ti,..4,ron7o, trace past we
6::assoxabll-4, 'lints are moving ant Tr
130597, 17 1).s.',ha7.-0 rit77.77,i44•-.-try for ref:alio
10 sort tott9„:fscs in order to meet 71
increasing- tIrti'atid 7nsu9atnl
lcittetra.t tare. "nee la,.
lotriines.:4 Is very artSve now.. and.
is swelling., the 1,-e9uone of tracle.'"Pre
at the Cit.11,4 IN fly),
active otvirigto C.o. sk-mand
day g...)041s. It is et.7...;y,e1ts.1 that th!
win vory hfr,aver tl790 reg
eir1'909191 W5t.0117.411.".'.g 1774.7c heirs?
1e9."..71471
Vlootesale tratle in fairly ar.tiv
'Mere Is. a good dore.onnd for lotoil-Sdh'
goods.
Soobsturolvol rouseilation.
.t Georg:a g194 orrete to ;ter too
"Doter John -ll cannot merry
that Itileaso +don't 1)111 yc,arsell
To which John 99190390
"I'747.4r itleny-No el:en:ger: I've
1702 *7:587 on a kOri.:te rano V'
Bronchitis or a Savere Cold on the Claest and Ltms, Doctors Win Point
to Dr. Chase's Syrup of Unsecd arm rpentinz as the
Most Eifectilve Treatment.
• For every class of disease there is one ino...clicine whiao stands pre-ettintnt as ?nlng superior to au
otheaa Th th::: ce.,.a 11111 .Ilostianit, Drezellitis, and all throat and bung ailments the recog,nized treatnaeat
n-e..Chas'5.7 Syrup, cr. Talaseod and Tatr.r.ntine. Doeters. ins uot nesitate to ease that alien the patient beconeesd/
flushed arid exagierated in his struggle for breath, svheeees loirdiy and experiences inicetee ag.ony she his
asest and tangprspera tion available that will give such prompt and therough relief a's ])oy
" it my duty to recommend 1)r. Chaser?* Syrup
rhase'zisol.ea. serireseirgoef apiuninTaavarvpuineittconea.t., 5455:
01
Linseed and Turpentine, as 1 had the Aetlema very bad: evuld get nothing to -do me any good. A. friend o'
99390e persuaded ms to try this remedy, as tie had tried it, and it proved successful. 1 tided it •and it cure
me. 1 nen thankful to -day to say 1 em a well woman through the use of thisreraedy. 1 keep it in the hou
aOl tiD19.'r.tiemitlistie'riadSlyvr°rouplciolliloLtinbs'leedwillainc)clut Titu;pentine• Ise well anown IP the homes of Canada that it seseraS
unnecessary to add further comment, bat a Word of warming may be roeedecl. :hearse are 5190010,tchoe:. pr4;•pta:dr:atlieotteE
,of linseed and turpentine, imitations of 1.0r.Casases. Be soreethe portrait and algae:tare of Be A. W. Chat
are en the bottle yoa buy. T'sven•ty-five eentsr bottle; faintly size, three tine
Eilmanaen, Bates Ss Co., TorontO.