HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1902-04-03, Page 3tO,
eaa •
April 3rd, 1902
II
TOM GLINTONM11/7041200134)
Ir.2;••••••••••••••-3,101•1
This is Your Opportunity THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
r-6 are ofiering to shrewd
bto ers the greatest
opportunity they
ever had in
Clinton
to purchase reliable goods
at prices Which defy
competition. See
the special
v nes
we now have 01) view in
J1r window.
LESSON I, SECIONO QUARTER, INTER-
NATIONAL SERIES, APRIL..
[COMTISM, 1902, heratommelleau Preas llama
1, 2. Saul yet breathing out threatentngs
and elaughter amenst the disciPless et the
Lord.
What an evil breath, he haill The
used only MS ()nee and rnetinfi ties As Y. S°w 8° Shall Y° 445° 011, YO4 SW+ "there is no in back room that awful night dyina ?
THE LORD'S•
1111RESILIN61.
•10.0•1•••••••,•••••••••.•
SPARES NONE IN SEPARATING THE
CHAFF FROM THE GRAIN.
. WHAT SHALL YOUR HARVEST BE?
11,40 . it
your earthly business hate not in absolutely pOrrowless. They will
there. one tangle too intricate. You .! wear blach; 'I you will wear white;
Sometimes feel as if our world were cypresses' for them, palms for you,
lull of bludgeons dying eaphaeame You will say: "Is it possible that
Oh, no; they are thresbing iestru- 1 ant here'? is this heaven? A111
Meets that God just suite to your so pure now will never do
case. There is not a dollar et bad anything wrong? Am I so well
deats on your ledger Or a disappoint- t,ho,t I will never again be sick?
raent about goods that you expected Are these corapanionships rso Arra
to go up, but that have gone •down, that thee will never again be bre-
or a ewindle of your business Partner ken? Is that, Mary? Is that John?
Or a trick On the part of those who Is that my loved one I ".put
are in the frame hind of merchandise away into darkness? Can. It be
th t ou e but God intended to that these are the faces of those who
word translated "breatbieg euttt overrule for your immortal hap, lay tio wan and emaciated in the
Oh, how radiant they are! Look at
breathe in or out, to breathe, te live. Troubles are of Our owu Malang mud talking that way to Me. I don't like
aa no et itsh eir oanir e wl 1.1Wahtyi
His very life was to hate Christ and are coed rer the Soul That Can to be cheated and outraged." Neither
tbowheel ial lir t h irsapcill
nightly. name, ehan,....e roweefel does the corn like the corn thresher,
but after it has been. threshee and theught when I left the world be -
CHAPTER 1. joHortense leaned bolt On: the oush-
Christians, and yet the time came
'when he could truly Say, "For me to Talmage Sermon Seem eaittie-Kpown low. Ministers drew pictures of this
winnowed it kas ii, great deal better
3
y :Head's Da....iling
BY W. HEI BURG ;
Anther of °A Penniless Orphan," .,4:Gertrtgles Marriage,"
"Her Only Brother," Etc., Etc.
•1/444411•10.11••••••••••111140114110•0•0•••••
land. but h. w tame compared with
"/ 1 • " she id coldl
.• live is Christ" I, 21), OM* first Text. opinion of 'winnowing mills teed corn , be lave so, sa y,
Watch Repairing is a Specialt InIxoduction to hen is in chapters via
the reality! They told me on earth . The exprees train Was etandin
With Us. 68; vih, 3., 8, in conneetIon with tee trietecggliheeteerlehalyt,eof Pro; 44
It t a Well," you flay, "if I ceulcl choose that death wee sueset. No, nol It the station of le-----, "One gmit
threshers, "There comes the conductor; may X
r.--- _e_ and the clouds flame offer yo my pore-monnaie? The
death of Stephen and the persecution rent°. ye tier Ilep't a Agriculture, wawa. , my troubles, I would be willing to be is sunrise! Glorious sunrise! I ute!" cried the brakeman, hurrying
A. J. GRIGG
--
following, whieh at this time was still
going en, Satire own account of hie Washin ton Maich 22 -From a i
g .• would not be trouble You would
troubled," Alt my brother, Ulm it. see the light noW purpling the bills, from one coupe to another. Greet -
e , With the ings and farewells Were being x
changed along the row of cars, hem; lady will pay at the next station,"
she said, turning to the Conductor,
•),„______,
life in those days is found in chapters Then the gates of heaven will be and there a thirsty passenger was "Slle has lost her ticket."
ProcesS familiar to the farmer nr. I choose something that would not corning ,-.ay,' ptetki4te.d. his trinkgeld,
Sciemeific jeweller and hurt, and unless it hurt it does not ajdht =Cll.
Os•tiloiars xxii, 8, 4; xxvi, 0-11; Gal. 1, 13, 14, but Talmage draws lessons of consolation
as and encouragement for PeoPle la sor- get sanctified. Your trial Perhaps opened,.and the entranced soul, with calling for beer, and now the bet
CLINTON, ONT. in Dph. II, a& he speaks of it all rutty be childlessness. You ere fond the acuteness and power of the veles,. rang for the third time In thia "Aeb, I thank you a thousand
being under the prince of the power of row and adversity. The text is • , e• ), • i will • - • - * times!" stammered Lucie.
of cluldren. You say; 'Why does la 'v.'s on, look thousands of meantime the coupes had been filled it Is nothing,"
fah xxviii, 27, 2God sen
8; "For the fitches d children to that other miles down ripen the bannered pbook a
b dbi
ro- up, in spite of the unconcealed an- 01a, ng,'•
returnedliOr-
Cie air. tense, taking up a n begin -
pe n-
s, 4. Saul, Saul, wha PerSecuteet thou are not threshed with a threshing in-. household, where they are unwelcome cession, a river of shimmering; noyance of the earlier occupants,
ning to read.
Sharp Break in Grain -Crop Reports and
Lower Cables Caused Weakness Satur-
day -rhe Latest Quotations.
THE MARKETS.
in the Hebrew language (nevi, 14) and
God had determined concerning him, Bread coin is bruised betiause he will
arrested him in his mad •Career, for staff and the cionmin with a rod.
"Hitherto shalt thou come; but no fur- not ever be threshing it." '
Thus spake Jesus of Nazareth to him strument, neither is a cart whce1 and are beaten and hanged about
turned about upon
the etches are beaten • out with a
the ciunmin, but ' when I would have taken them in
car , y ,
the arras of nay affection?" You say.
trial pe haps may be a disfigured
countenance or a face that is easily
"Any other trial but this." Your
lettered and- you say "I could splendor, and will cry out, " eh° and Its by magic all was quiet But
standing close by, will say, "Do the whistle to his lips a young girl 1
YOU not know who they are ? " rushed out of the station in breath-
catin'ot guess who they ed
The.' "Wilhere?:' cried the con ue or.
are they?" And the angel of God, just as the brakeman was putting
"No " says the entrant d " less este
angel will say; "I will telt you, "To Hohenburg-second class- scene of past days kept rising up.
4•wria still. Lucie could hardly take
tine her, and in her mind scene, after
bright spring day, In the coupe aU
her eyes off the beautiful face tame'
The train hurried on through the
•h th I d The pale, small face, -with the deli-
Saturdav Evening, March 22. ther" (Job xxxviii, ID. Whoever Misfortunes of various kinds come
• ondUre lf CillY I was good then, a o ey are, These are a ies!" she gasped.
me?
epee nose and nostrils tbat alviaYO •
Cable,s were weak to -day. Liverpool touches a Christian touches • Christ uliPon varioue peoPf lookina " And yew trial perhaps is they whe came out af ,grent tribe- ."All full!" said he ma , b q
t n rus ue- seemed to vibrate, the beautifully
wheat futures closed %d to %(.1 lower than Himself, but not even the devil can t great need o emne. y -nine people e• bitten er threshing, andfirst-
le and in all timee
yesterday and corn Cul -urea 7A1(1 to 10 lower. f h s -olace Look a vielent temPer, and y.ou have to •
robes washed and matle white in class coupe and thrusting the sten-
had their '1y, pulling open the door of a ,. formed mouth, about which. such e.
There was sharp sell off to -day at Chi-
cago. May wheat lost 21/2c from yesterday;
May corn 21/4c, and May oats 11hc.
•
1. ,:.k DIN ,, '.‘: 0 F. A.T
Following are the closing quotations at ,
important wheat centres to -(lay: ,
New York Cash. May. July.
78% 7894 7914
Chicago 70% 721/4 7'
Toledo 78 78 75
Duluth, Na 1 Nor 701/ 711/4 72¼
do., No. 1 hard
TORONTO SF. LA.WILENOB BARRET.
Grain -
Wheat, white, bush .....$0 74 to $0 8e1/2
Wheat, spring, bush ..... 0 70 0 12
Wheat, red, bush 0 75 0 79
Wheat, goose, bush . 0 67 0 07
Peas, bush 0 85 • . •
Beans, bush 1 00 1 25
Rye, busth 0 58 .
Barley, bush 0 54 6 ii
Oats, bush 0 46 0 47
Hay and Straw -
Hay, per ton $12 00 to $13 00
Clover hay, per ton 8 00 10 00
Straw, loose, per ton 6 00
Straw, sheaf, per ton 8 00 466
Prulta and Vegetables -
Potatoes, per bag $0 65 to $0 70
Cabbage, per dos 0 40 0 (10
Apples, per bbl 8 50 4 50
Onions, Per bag .080 100
Turnips, per bag 0 20 0 25
Poultry -
Chickens, per pair $0 CO to $1 25
Turkeys, per 11) • 0 12 0 15
Dairy Produce -
Butter, 11). rolls .........$0 18 to $0 23'
Bggs, new -laid, dos • 0 16 - 0 17
14.11LO i rti Li V ill $ FOC N..
The run of live stock at the Cattle Mar-
ket was not large -05 carloads, composed, of
817 cattle, 1334 hogs, 485 sheep and lambs,
with about 88 calves.
Export Cattie-Ch..ilce loads of heavy
shippers mold at $5.40 to $5.65; medium ex-
porters, $5 to $5.35; light exporters at
54.65 to $4.90 per cwt.,
Export Bulls -Choice heavy export bulls
sold at $4.25 to $4.60; lIght export bulls
at $3.60 to $3.90 per cwt.
Export Cows -Export cows sold at $4 to
$4.50 per cwt.
Butchers' CattleCholce picked lots Of
butchers' cattle, equal In quality to hest
exporters, 1100 to 1150 lba each, sold at
$4.00 to $5.121/2; choice picked lots of
bunters' heifers and steer.), 925 to 1525
lbs. each, sold at $4.60 to $4.80 per Mt.;
loads of good hoteliers' mild at $4.25 to
$4.50; loads of medium butcher's', $3.75 to
$4.15; Inferior butchers' cows, at $3.30 to
$3.00 per cwt.
Exporters and Butchers' Mixed -Loads of
mixed butchers and exporters sold at $4.50
to $4.80 per cwt.
Feeders -Feeders' steers, weighing from
900 to 1000 lbs. each, sold at $4 to $4.00
per cwt. .
-1..tockere=„13/elari sci-„-dirifeiiheir iteere;
400 to 600 1». each, sold at i 8.15 to $8.30
per cwt.; st ers, 70u to 800 lbs. each, sold
at $8A0 to $8.00 per cwt.; off-color, in'
--bred steers Sind heifers, sold at about $2.80
to $3 per cwt.
Mitch Coats -Twelve ranch cows and
springers sold at $28 to $48 each.
Calves -Eighty-eight veal calves sold at $2
to $10 each, or from $4 to $5.50 per cwt.
Lambs -Yearling lambs sold at $4.50 to
$5.50 per cwt.
Spring Lambs -Spring lambs aro . worth
$2.50 to $5 each.
Hogs -Best select bacon hogs, not lase
than 160 lbs., nor more than 200 lbs, each,
off cars, sold at $6 per cwt.; lights at
65.75. and fats at $5.75 Der cwt.
LACROIX PAYS FOR HIS CRIME.
Double 3Iurderer Hatiged•at Bull, Que.
bee, en Friday.
Hull Jail, Que., March 22, -Stanis-
las Lacroix was hansed in Hull jail
yesterday morning at 8.05 o'clock.
He died gamely. Rev. Father Forget
made a brief slatoment on behalf of
the murderer, who said he admitted
his guilt, and died at peace with the
world and his Cod.
Lacroix did not go to bed Thurs-
day night, hut sat up with the nuns
and pi-ayed, IIis little son was with
him until nine o'clock, and waswith
his doomed father again early yes-
terday mornin4. The three brothers
of the murderer unit his three sisters
bade him farew...•11 about twenty min-
utes to eight.
The sceeold was exposed turd about
fiftecti spectators were present. Af-
ter the black cap was adjusted La-
croix was cautioned by the priest to
keep up heart. He said, "I ate
not afraid to die." At 8.05 the sig-
nal was given and Lacroix fell nine
feet. Thirteen and a half minutes
later the jail surgeon pronounced the
man dead. His neck had not been
broken by the fell, hut death was
due to strangulation.
Lacroix was hanged for the brutal
murder of his wife on Aug. 24, 1900.
A year previous they had separated.
The day before the crime Lacroix
bought a revolver and then followed
his wife into the house and caught
her crouching behind the door, and
holding the baby. Catching her by
the hair of the head he dragged her
out. The women, clinging to her
baby, tried to reach the door, and
Lacroix shot her in the hand, Fall-
ing upon her knees the woman
screamed, "Stanisles, what do you
menn?" For an unctver Lacroix shot
her ne. and On fell deed. Lacroix
retut ,••1 tit the itutu.e v ‘rn his wife
1 1 It 11; j! t ,,1 1,••rn
• ; i• ; ! .1 I..i.P-
t h •
go one step beyond God's perneissien drive it like . six unbrolien horses
then to this neglected allegory ef .
•
(Job I, 10; Dan. Iv, 35; Zech, it, 8). 4 .. • , amid tbe genpowder explosions of a
my text.
Though it was midday, this light from , great holiday, and ever and anon
There are three kinds of seed men- .
heaven was above the brightness of tioned-iltches, eummin and corn. Of • it runs away with you. Your trial is
the sun, and Saul could not see forthe .the last we all know. But it may be the. asthma, You say, "If it . were
the rheumaeism or neuralgia or ery-
glory of that light (=vie 13; xxii, 11.). well to state that the etches, and the •
sipelas, but. it is this asthma, and it
5, S. The Lord said, I am Jesus, Whom cummin were small seeds, like the
thou persecutest. • .'' caraway or the chickpea. \then 1.hese• is sech an exhausting thing to
He recognizes a suli'erier and asks, grains or •h.erbs were to he threshed, breathe." Everybody •bas. some vote -
"Who 'art .Thou, Lord?" The answer they were thrown on the floor, bnd tion or annoyanee or trial, and • he
fllls him with. trembling and astonish- tho workmen N'Votild conic around or she thinks •. it is the one 'least
.a;dapted.' "Anything but this," all
with . staff or rod or'. Rail and . • beat
ment, for Jesus of Nazareth is.aetually
them until the Seed .Woulkl 'Le Separ- say; "anything but thie." My hearer,
speaking to him. Seeing Him to he in- . 1 •
'ated, bet when the corn was to 1 e
threshed that' was thrown on • the ing all this time against God? Who
ad the men would fasten' oxen manages the affairs of this World
or horsee to a cart with iron •chritcd anyhowis it an infinite Modoc 'or a.
Sitting Bull savage' or an oinni140-
wheels; that cart would be • drawe
tent, Nana Sahib? No; it is the most
around the threshing floor, and so .
ti w.ould be accomplished. merciful and 'glorious and wise being
e work .
in all theuniverse. You cannot teach
Different kinds of threshing for 'dif-
•otheipotence anything. You have
forma products, "The fiteh• s aye -n..a
threshed with a threshing instrument:, fretted andworried almost enough.
Do you think so? ,Some oayou are
neither is a. cart whael turned about
making yourselves ridiculous hi ' the'
upoir tiite dummin, but lin) filches are
sight of the angale.•• Here is naval
beaten Out with a staff iind the cum -
architect,. and. he •draws• out the plan
min . with. e, rod. Bread coin. 18
Of a ship. of many thousand tone
beuisad becausehe will not 'everbe
. !
tbreshing • . . Many workmen aro brig -aged on it for
a Jong while. The ship is dorm, turd
The great ihought thit .the text
.sopie day, with the. flap; up, and the
preSSes 'upon our souls is elect we nei-
gh :thretreh acme kind of ihreshine air .gorgeous with bunting; that yes -
process. The fact that
.sel is leunched for Sotnip
iteutee eAt
;vote may. lei
•
h av-table tbat tinie lad six emirs or. age
'• ", turd
deed the Christ, the Messiah, whom
the prophets had foretold, he at once
acknowledges hIlei as Lord and meek-
ly asks what he is now to do. Thus sud-
denly shall Israel ns.a nation be 'slir- .
prised some day, and, looking upon
Him whom they pierced, they shall be -
filled witb true penitence and, accept-
ing Him as their icing expected Mes-
siah, shall say: "Le this ia our Ged.
We have waited for Hira, and He will
save us" (Zech. xil, 10; Isa. are, 9).
Saul's conversion Was a pattern ota
type of the conversion of the nation
(I Tim. I, 16).
7-9. He was three days without sight
and neither did eat nor drink. •
The men who were With.him fell to
the earth, seeing the light and. being devotuig .VOui Iii to
.
afraid They also lieafd the voice of ;noble purposes. will not win You nny
. ( hrist hut comes running' down the
toy beat which: ho has made With
. doek With a
some one speaking, but did not bear esc00. Wil ber 1 urce, : the,
his own jackknife,. and he .seys:
the words, for those were for Saul .eniencipator, Was ih his ',day deeisive-
"Here; me boat is better' than yotirs.
ly ealled "Doctor 'Cantwell." Thomas '
only. Compare xxil, 9; xXvi, 14. It • ..Tust look at this:Uhl:6qm and"theae
Millington Macaulay, the advocate of •
was somewhat like the experience of. all that. was good, leng before ' he weather crossjEtek'. braces." And he
Daulet and of our Lord as recorded in' became:the most conspicuouS histora deeps .his *tie boat besidethe great
Dan. x, 7; John xii, 28,:29. That Saul his day, was caricatiteed ei ship, h and there is a roar • of' laughter
_, jotil 1 the nurirterly 'reviews as "Bata on, the heck?! Ale nit friends, that
really saw Jesus is evident from verse •
17 and I Cor. •xv, & What Jesus said i blecton
• gue Macaulay. ' Norman Mc- glee s oi is your life as God plan.:
to Saul as He commanded hiei to ;Ise; Leort he great 'friend of the Scotch ued it•-vaet, million tanned, , ocean
, ;
and stand upon hisfeetis fully stated ; Poser" was industriously Maligned Ira .destinedeternity beano! That tittle
beat is your life as. you wee.° trying
all quarters, although On the . day '
in Priers testimony before Agrippa in'
xvi16-18Conelder him three daiii when he•was, carried out to his bur- to hew it Pet and fashion it , end
x, .
blind and fastingthe world shut Out, lal.• ft workman stood and looked at launch. it, Do not 'try to he a rival
,-
the body mertifieddying to self, the funeral procession, tied said; "If of the great 'Jehovah.' God is -alseays
, (4od •
he ha.ch done hothing for anybody ligh,i, eTd in nine eases out of ten
dealtng with his soul. It 16 the period more than he 'hrts done tor peei he '.3.:are Wrong. iTe sends. just the
. hardships, •just tke bankruptcies, just
of death preceding resiirtection (Gen: would shine as the lsters, foi• err
the blood of the lamb." - der figure in, tumbling wraps and played; the steel gray eyes that took
IlitorY has no more gratulatory traveling bagafter her and then
scene- han the .breaking in of the' went slowly alon the step of the
-1. a green light when excited, blended -
English army upon Lialelow, India. already moving train and began to tle, girl of former years; - The wild,
wonderfully with the face of the lit-.
A few weet.s. before a. inesseere hiei collect the .tickets. • • - '
occurred at hawnpura and 200 wo- The girl " sat • 0,.• :moment,. still beautiful child that had been such a .
delightful playmate was now vividly
men and children had been- put in, breethlese, looking at her wraps aud in her memory again.
a atione, Then five professional hut- bag, then straightened her hat on
chei s Went ixi and sTew them. Then her blonde braids and wiped. her . ,The Von LOwens had once ,come to
D-, and had rented the upper story
the bodies - of the ' slain were take!, heated face with her haedkerchief, of her father's house, and had lived
oil a
' nd thrown fete a well, As Then she looked at a- lady leaning .there-faeher, daughter, and govern-
the.- English army, came into out of the opposite ' window, • who
Cawripur Guy went into tee. rohm, ' had 'not once turned. her heed when ess• • .
Lucie remember -ad- well .the hand -
and oh, what . a horrible scone 1 -she had dashed so hastily int e the some man with the aristocratic fear
Sword strokes on the wait n e • coign. She wore a simple brown tures, and -with what strong affece
the floor, showing that the poet' cloth, Masa without any trimming, -.
tlon the little- one would hang about ..
thhigs -had erotiehed ellen alley died but the Way in •which it fitted .. the •
his . neck, when he • would return •
and they tinW also- that- tbe floe • slender figure was perfect.' 1.'rom •
home after an absence of weeke. At •
was ankle deep in blood. - elle . beneath the plaited skirt a bea.uti-
that time Hortense was wearing •
soldiers walked on their heels aceose !„ fully. shaped leather boot could be
Mourning for, her -Mother, and it, used -
it, lest their :hoes • be submerged 2,•seeti; gents de Swede with many but-
to- have such an odd effect -the wild,
of the caeriake, And onthat- i tons covered the slender hands, ' and
pale child In the deep -black clothes. .
[boor. ofblood- there Weee Pewee; a little brown felt hat without orna-
The governess also eame 'clearly be
-
looks - of haii• 'ana iraginents of 'Monte which crowned' an abundance
fore her :mempry.again=the elderly,
dresses. . . of,dark hair, finished the elegant tea •
fussy person who was always look, -
in Lucknow they .had heard of let • '
Ing for her 'pupil, "Oh, Mademoiselle
the massacre, and the woinen were' On the seat Opposite the lade lay
Lucie! dear . Madame Welter, have
welting for the ethic awful death, an open hook, and. near it a band -
you seen Hortense?
welting amid aegaish urteolde wait- some leather portfolio, on. the •silver .
Luclahad always . been pesitively- •
Mg in pain ' and stervateori, but clasp of which was engraved '44H.
forbidden either to drive her goat or
wieeing heeoleally, wLen, One *dee,. L." ander a seven -pointed corenet. '
to ride her pony through the park;
Thivelo !k and outrat'a tent' .Nor- The• b00% was evidently French..
but Mlle. Bettie was always beg-
inan a lei Sir -. fair! d . Marti. and Several large newspaper sheets ' had
ging her mother, in aer broken Gere •
Peel, the herpes of the gegliSh at- . did to .flie floot, and neat them the 'man.: "Do let' Lueie home oftener
my-buzza 'for theraleebrce o .in - on astoniehed breve eyes of the young •
with us, Frau Doctor, Hortense is
that horrible,4cene, and.while vet -girl saw the reeriains Of two cigar --
se fond of her, and elle 80. sielderii
the guns wete sotutding, andwhileettea. She knew now where this
cheala, were issuing from .01e:starve_ pleasant , pungent ;oder had come ceres•fer other children, Mademoiselle .
Lucie is so gentle,. she will have a '.•
Mg, 'dye g People en the ohe '• sida from which. filled' the coupe.. . • -
_' good enfluence upon Hortense
•
1.•
and feol atm travet wolei end pow- "Tickets, please;" called the ' voice
.....,Sho recalled All the games .which
der-blacl ened. soldiers. On the other, ' of theconductor, as he leaned in at Hortense had suggested ---'- the races
,right tit re, fn frOnt. of the King'S the windoW-.• Hastily the girl's lit- •
len, the court -yard the secret confabe
polaee, there wits stu*•11 n 'scene .0: tle hand went to. the •*p.ocket of her ' in. the attic -and then how she used
,liaridslial,ing and. .entbracinit . and dress, and equally hastily it caner* •.
to be scolded when she appeared be-
boisterotis joy as would etterly con- out erapty: 'An • eager search 'was .
fere her Mother co -aired ,with dust
found the pee. of the pea end. • the now begun': through the traveling- ,
and her 'clothes tore. Now she seem -
pencil of the. peinter And no won,. bag, on the . seat and •ori• the floor, 1 ed to feel again the fascination that
der, when these: ereaciateh. Women, ' while the girl's !Ace kept changhig .1•
! used to. iiifluence her in those days,".
who had suffered so heroi'aely lor ' from red to white; and her eyesgaveWhen She., would he sitting busy with
Christ's sake, . marthed our frorit a frightened look at the impetient •.
her schoolbooks in the children's.
their inearceratioe, one ,Wounded face of the conduetor. : • • ' roora, and put of the branches of the.
English ' soldier . got up in his 7. "1 must have lost* my 'porte-mon-
. fatigae and *minds and' : Leatied - hale, and my ticket with. lei" • • she Pilaf -tree in front Of the •windew ti,
er . a
-xxii, 4; silt 17; Jonah U, is, Hos. vie2; and ever." A11 the small wets of Lon -
t ta • 11 d threw • a .• Starcimered at last . • pale,. childish face, with large grey .
John 1.1, 194 Rev xi ID doh lied their flthg at •John Wesley,' have. • •Ele knows what aiiideof grain
You are; and he 'ends the right kind . chio-tp sanfodi..stheoutheid, ,i7. Three, 0,11,ela, yea, . 'Look again," growled i. the Man.
: Are you not coming! Make haste! I
eyes. and .dark. hair would appear.
autele cense Bate of Torsiis, for,:behold, he • men could not . escape the maligning 0 .. . . I eill, be rad ; that y,w,v4 an
ocoiati.xei wouTen. nu, es, "1 7111 come bace,,, ,
g . en?. ! t a With that he disappeared, and she , • . •
- • will wait in. the barn " • '' •
1042. Inquire in the house of Judas far ehe father of.-elethoclism. If such "
- f thrashing machine' i "
Reedier and more triumphant, ecene began' anew to ransack the 'pockets The sums would be added up in the .
priefeta7 en• , ,..... . - • . of the world, neilher eazi you expect or staff or iron wheel just according • ' '. • ' •• ' *
Tbus said the Lord to A,natias a de * t t • 1 f tl -I k t k
, 0 get re o .. le s tarp,. eon . s ro e as you are fltehea or ChIllnlia' Oi`• most reckless manner, and she would
hwill it . bo . wheta you .efloene up. intee of her bleak alpaca dreseand all lhor
out disciple and one ,who had a good, 'of the tribulem. All who will live ' • f au- . hurry oft to the dimly lighted' barn.
lige 'd0h, dearl". trembled in the Where everything' 't elY,
report of all the Jews at. Dainascus godly le Jesus elitist must . •suller ' Again, iity. Subject teaches that God ett('arcveernatibrnorac.)f this
ewonrlidets ard 19: belongpige, but in vein. A hal
(xxii, 12). ' He, like Philip in a previa*: persecution. Besides ,that, there are keeps trial on Us until we fet, go. ing ' with the wound% Pf .stilietntral; ' • musty, :And Hort
smelledousewoue
fdr talk
the eicknesses turd the bankruptclee The termer ehouts. "When!" to his ur,utoaL ringing
zonianush rehliarly
arid tell stories', "When .1 grown
lesson, is prompt end obedient one on . and wan with hunger, and whiles' the ma
horses as. soon as the grain is drop- I
1 hosts of :. God are :cheering their Can 'I help frau iin9a,' asked
Lucie up, then -a" She even then talked of
whom the Lord could rely to do alls pointments which aeo ever putting a podfrom . the stalk.: Tho 1 armor - . great HOsanna - you•. will strike Walter?" ' ' • 1:1- Y way., . .. a possible husband, • ',
and. the irr4ations and the die:1p- '
bidding. His reply reminds us of Satre comes with his,foek and tosses. up aerated to heeself. It ' was '
cup of aloes to emir lip. Those wrin- hends 'pf cengratulation and eternal The latterlooked up ,in astoraste • rAolo.
uel and Isaiah (I Sam. 111., 4; 6, 8, 10; , kles on your face are hieroglyphica • • the Straw, and .he sees that the
savi)These deliveraU're in the preserre ef the merit at the beautiful regular fee- ,.. odd that they Should meet. again
I. , 8. threedays ' find Seth . Whichif eleciatneid Ill 1
, ee ' •
/ N c.. t i1- naae straw has let go the grain. and the throne. : On that . night there • will be tares turned teemed her, and which' 1' *`"
iere, after a separation of so many
and his Lord in intimate eMninunien. out a theillineestory of - trouele. TIM grain is thorotighly. threshed, 8o fires on overY hill . of heaven, and seemed so familiar,* but whieli 'she y•ears. What had Hortense been •
Saul talks With the Lord, and the footstep of the rabbit. is seen ' the God, Smiting rod and aurning wheel bon
if! there - will be illothination in .eyerY could not in any way recall, - ing all, this time? She Wanted to
do -
Lord in vision reveals laim.self more iteect illOrping on. the.. enow, Anti ' on both ceps° as soon as We let. go. We palace ad thee? will be ,a eandie , You book just as you did Lucie hear; but scarcely knee/ haw to ask.
fully to Saul. From Jesus Christ bsi the white hairs of the aged are the hold en to this world, with its pleas- ',In '..ey_ery ..window.. .Ah:,, not 1. for,. . in the *dejer When We used to drawl "How is Mademoiselle 'Bertin?"
revelation he reeeleed the gospel. and footprints showing Where swift trou- likes and riches an enaolUmen
"toy set, th.a get,. I fol got. They wilt have rio : ender your father's' . garden • .hedge
ts, an•d pho .asked at last. . , . ' ..
ble alighted. - '' Mir knuckles
from Him also all his future ins -titre -
',1*Oh, very well, thank you. She is
need of ,the •caralle or of sun, for to steal _strawberries." •
it seeins as if we could liold on . still with me; has grown very Stout
lay subject, in the lirst place, the Lord God giveth them light, . A Senile came ever l5105' faCe.
some threshing trouble and beats us
V7--- and thev shall reign forever and "Hortense von Leaven! I did not and whimsical."
teaches U9 that it is no compliment forever. God comes along iih
13-16. He is a chosen vessel mite me to TAICio wa.s sileht again. Then she
to us if we escape great trial. rine ever. Trail, hail, sons and driagh- recognize youl bear my name.
tion (Gal. f, 1.1., 12, 1.5, id).
fetches and the cummin on one thresh- iloo?e• tiWte started under tee de- tars pf the Lord God Almighty! •-•That can well believe but' you .remembered how Hortense heel once
Anatdas hesitates just a little as
received a wonderful doll from her
he thinks of Saul's reputation . and on ariother threshing floor, and• Sa,y, We ;teal -nod out of Our geography Peer .Approaoh. .
, .
ture, the 'Same blonde' child; just as
. are -Just the same.' Featere for lea.- .
•
mg floor might leek over to the corn usion wae great world. •
uncle, who had been•making them a
authority and his mactiless against "Look iit:that poor, mesa -able, bruis- that it was so many thousand
Christians. inc Lord graciously -bears eh corn! Wg 1'
lave only been a little
while I-". She visit, and how she immediately pre-
withmiles • in diaMeter and so many "Scarcely a flaw Was to be f0
mites in circumference, and , we ' In the blockhouse Linke" savs a dialinie a if your mother had kept you in, a •
glass case. so Unchanged and
not care for such foothill thin& as
soft has sentacl it to Lucie, saying she did
peats His command to go and matures destroyed." Weil , the corn; if it bed °aid, "Oh; my, what a . world! • paper, ' When. Lord Ditchener madYe ' yetoouproefda7 !l'Hmoared'91a was he see dolls. 'f}loW is your old Uncle Lu -
Ananias in his objeetions, but re pounded, but that lies been almost
.ii4. dolf? I remember the doll he bought
him that Saul is to be His sPecial mpg. Tips, would ansear and say; „ '1.),3 Trouble came' in after life, and this his gteat drive." •The phrase is•emin- continued,- "•wheh we rented
you," she added, hesitatingly, aa
senger to the gentiles , One Would you kriow•the reeson yoe hare not trouble sliced off oue part of the - enely suggeetive of a game of gee',
Hortense let her book tall, and look -
think that the Lord's first assurance to been as leech pounded as I have?' It world, pad it has got to. be a But though his drive was a flne one house from your fathereeabout
twelve years? Now I am Monty-
ing would have been sufficient encour
* would be as several run v r " world and it is de • ' a ,-
Y o c . Yet e PlOCIA.,111i., all Ilow old Were you 'at that time?"
five so it, was thirteen. years ago! cd. at her with surPrise.
"Old? Yes, he was seven years
is because you are not of SO =di smaller world.; and in soul? esti- he, unfortumately, • failed in his
Ananias that the persecutor Was pray- worth as I am. If you were, you mations a, very insigniucant approach -London Globe.
the :tame as 'a spiritual propraty. - _
agement, but we are so stew to•expeet owe 01,3 men WII0 sapp.ose thee are
• 1
; "Ten years old, Hortense." older than my papa," she answered.
wonders from HIM Whose name is the Lord's favorites sinfply because Ten per cent. off, 50 per cent. They Whre now sitting opposite 1.4331
You kneW him -right! I married
ILI oerzawrdee, hjousatitaesr .Ioulreftmaserhrfoaogl;
Wonderful. Saul is not only chosen to their barns are fell and their kink oral there are those who ‘vourd not each other, Hortense leaning beck
Their,
give 10 cents for this world - the gracefully, Lucie • sitting bolt up -
bear the name of Christ, but also to account is flueli and there are oo fen -
suffer, for faithfulness to Christ and dais in the house. It maY lie be entire world -as a soul possession.
he was thrown from his horse at
Another thing my teet teaches us . ceremony. , •
right, as mei might on a visit of
the richt day," '
Baden-Baden, at the races, and died
' Cambridge Won the Bade,
suffering for His sake are inseparably cause they tire fitches and CtIminin, Londoh, March 24.- winging to- "So you are twente-three nowt Lucie's eyes tlarge with 'tie
l. thct le is that Christian sorrow is go-
ltl the poor widow may be the Lord's ing a terminue. h *What have von been doirig since we ++: grew
connected in this present 'evil age, to have sure
h •
'while the whole, world Beth in the My text says, "Bread corn is. • - -a-- "Oh., how. sad!" she 'said, .evarmlY.
various parts of a splendid piece moved away from D ---I T 11 :of'
corn. You aro but little .pounded he -
signs of distress, the Cambridge are your barents and sister?" , all alone?. ,
Phil. 1, 29; II Tim. 11, 12; 111, 12, but be is the best part of the harvest. The
she brUised and ground because she ever threshieg It." Messed be God
for that! Pourpd away, 0 flail l
Saturday at Mortlake, winning the The young lady did not answer,
V.). See also John xv, 18, 10; xvi, 83; mew shot across the finish line
done. "He will not 59th annual boat raee between The smile faded out of the girl's .
. only shrugged her shouldersas if to
18. cording to the value of the grille. If will soon be
the two great En lish tiniversi- face, Lucie looked down at her •
Maids, and there was a long petite, say; That is not the wotsat• by a.
encouraged by Rona viii, 18;4 Cor X, heft of the threshing machine is ac- Turn on, 0 wheel! Your work
. be ever threshing itl" blow, the , g before she answered, suppressing a good deal." After a pause ithe add -
17 -20. Receive thy sight aria be fined You hat% not been threshed in life,
Christian has almost as much uSe• 'A"'
riF0 full boat lengths behind ed, hastily, is she took up her book'
hi the organ for the stop tremulant . . . sob:
with the Holy Ghost. . perhape there Is not much to thresh!
Thus said Ananias to Mail as. having, If you have not been much shaken of ' "They are both dead." again:
Of mechanism, without showing never heard from you since. ROW d,
wicked one (Gal. 1, 4; I. John a 10. ft bruished because he whi not be I am so sorry, And now are you
ceuse you (ire but little worth and
me he has for the trumpet, but af- tugging and straining at their oars,
found him just where the Lord said trouble, perhaps it' is becattee there
into the portfolio forever.
came the vanquished wearers of the • Hortense von Lowen was silent "I am engaged again, and shall be
he would, he pet his hands epee hint is gobig to be a very email yield. ter awhile he will put the last
And loeked out of the window. married in four weeks."
When there are plenty of blackberries dirge Clo le; contained.)
the gatherers go out with large bas- Wm, 3%) is fairly good, '"And *here have you found a i
and told of the Lord's commission. Be So mucla of us as is wheat' The time
will be eeparated from so much but there is no doubt that Cana henle?" she asked at last.
received eight, both natural and spit', kets, but when the drought has al- • -
as is chaff and there %via be rio bridge could have cut it • down at "With my sister, who married the
Real, confeseed Christ in linpUsue took most consurned the fruit, then a
e sure More neeil of pounding. They least 20 seconds if pushad, There Ober orster Demmer
food fel' the body arid %FRS strengthen tat me win do as W 11 It
never cry in heaven beca,use they , was a fair tide with the crews, remember her wedding?"
ed and immedlatelY Preached in the took the venomous snake on Paul's .
.
have nothing to cry about. There Berra e.1.1r. I•Oublo Tracking. ' "Oh, yes, I remember it, She WAS
the Christ, the Son 01 (30(1. Old Mugs stones until he WaS taken tip
shall have . your friends all around a. pretty girl, wore a, mull dress, and
synagogues that Jekis..of Nazareth is heed, and the pounding of him with
for are no tears of bereaVement for you Were opened
hfarch 24. -Tenders cried so bitterly, at her wedding."
are passed away, all thin -:s are 1;ecome dead, and the jamming against him
about you. There are z10 teoes ere opened Saturday for the "I have been with her until now."
pew, the Spirit has clotbM Himself of prieon gates, and the Eplusian double tracking of the Grand "And notv?" asked Hortense. •
WISth Sett (Jude. vi, 81*. IL ta, Margin, vociferation, and the aeales skinned of Poverty because each Sit t
system bettveen Jordan The clear face of the girl tamed
and note henceforth he does but Ono tChhea,r1IOTIOIcSelativabalteicalindanhda817'eeehisleiSi lant'ildnk St. David on the Niagara red as a rose. "I am traveling tip.
by the painful stocks, and the feund-
thing, knows but one master, and for ering of the Alexandrian corn ship, to the Waldrobe eh •e b .1 e t Falls division, a distanee of 14 day to my ' futtire inOther-in-laaos,
and the beheading' stroice of the Ro-
their array No tears of sick -
1 °I 1 ri es ge miles. The eompany will do the where 1 am to remain until ray
, - man eheieft to bring Paul to his pro- , „ •
nos, tor there are no pyloonionias trachlaying themselves, the mason- ,Wedding."
Him ts raedy to lay doWn big life,
per development. It was not because i ry having been already finished. Hortense von towel looked mile
tions treat the . rolling* river of
life and o1 the lame
e
had to suffer. It was because they
atm, but the pulses throbbing with 1 Marconi has definitely decided on to- Mother -in -liar live in Hohenberg?"
n
were bettor, arid God wanted to ntake the health of the eternal God in a. cn.ting his wireless station at Table "Ye,s; and he too. He hae lately
them best. I3y the carefulness, of the The decision hall become practioing physician there;
e blossoms tall or our gorgeoue Oc- been conimunitated to Mayor Bur. he was fornierly assistant at Protege
Head, Glace Bay.
climate like our ffene before the ,
threshing you May' alWaye conclude
the Value of the grain. •tabu before the leaves seater. cheit and President MeArell of the sor I3 -'s clinic in 1-1--. When
Next, my text, teaches us that God XS there not enough salve in this , Board of Trade of Glace Bay. 'Week he became engaged to ine lie ;tatted
Proportions our trials' to What we ' text- to Inge 0, plaster large en. on the station Will be commenced at in Hohenberg. De you know atlY-
thing of •Ilohenberg?"
can bear -the stag for the (itches, the ough to heal all your wounds ? once*
rod for the Cuniteire the. iron wheel Whom a -child is hurt, the mother "I knoW It Very Web; x live there
-With my grandfather."
great trouble say, "Oh, I earht bear it will soon feel better," And that London, March 24.-A, despatth
, Two Th'neatand hie Daily.
"Then do you alee know' Doctor
for the corn, Sometimes people in is Very apt to say to it, "Now,
nacho. in the a r and no malarial exhalta
Robert , and 'Lady ingly' into the happy, trustful e,yeS
41i, &wow ..www,rwmAywhydwww.whvomfamthwiiviwwwwvoivwvimfamtimywi Ruseell. end Frederick Oberlin were martoril ibis His site, 'Of her companion. "I congratulate
crutch f
WATCH
FOR THE
DI ACK CAT
itiwpmwmvammotkomonm
51 Worse than other people that theY II°
lithb 'and splint fee th •brokenHalifax N, S March 24. --Signor you heartily, And deep your future
w•'•
witmwkwvom4
a Adler?"
it!" Mit you did bear it. God Would is: What, God eays when he etrame. to ea c g
HorOifl tense shook her head. "X khear
riot Wei sent it upon you if he had on all our trouble in the hush of parry from Lahore (Punjab Pro-
tObedy, We live in Very' hotired
not knot that you could bear it. this great promiss, nweepiag riuty. vinco, British India) SAO the 0400
You treinbled and you sWOorted, but eoauro for a night, but joy. cora.. Mortality reached 2,000 dailY, weer there My graridfather awl X,
You got through. God will not take eth in the morning." you totty The outbreak, which is the worst on and X am. %Wet traveling a great
t 1 h di I f reeord, is attributed to the policy deal of the time,
from your eyes olio tear. oo many &WO your poci.et ore e
rReeitate sisanox TALKi.
thud tits Australian Squadron Desiga.
ad to Do,
Wellington, New Zealand, March
24„-Sp.eaking at a banquet here
Saturday night, Prime Minister
Sod -
don Raid he was In favor of the In-
crease of the Auetrallea1 acittedron.
Ire declared that Russia aqui plainly
attempting to secure a largo gleam
Lottrd lit China.
The Anglo -J opener:1e agreenient mut
made in oz•der to prevent Ressia from
eecoming the coetrollitm power in
the North raelfic, The Japanefei
navy and the British -Chinese squad -
1(111 the Prime Minister declared,
would be sufficiently strong to Com -
110t the Russian Inlillence,
The Australian squadron would
have to:protect the trade of the col-
, !es. arntio of the cruisers now in
evict) were out of ditto arid Would
• a a to he dieearded arid replaced by
di.er ships.
Salnrannle
litereit 24.-Ueup• Sahara
h etelielan trinl here ter the
1' '111 01' r '1; pee
10., and wig' he in)11'0:16
nor frore: your lungs one sigh too ssppit4 wet with teal% tat your of non-intorieronce &tate cos- And. 3?0t11' ftither Herr Velh LOWee •
deep nor front your temples ono death pillow, but you Will go up tml*
threb too'sharp, PerPlexiti s ot
-..1P I. v411! 441,44 tu919.,