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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-07-17, Page 2gte mot= wobante rimmwmANANvowliwiwawhiwkoommorawwwwwwwmweiftromifti ollusi coNsiiiilTioN 'Mo. Bo% Proprietor. r WHY ALBAN! LIKES DR. ANEW PHYSICIAN, SURGEON, ACCOOCHEUR. Office e-tIpstaire in Gee Macdonald Block. Night cars ansevered at office. DRS. CHISHOLM & CHISHOLM PHYSICIANS • 'SURGEONS ETC, .Tosephine Serest, •,••• Wingham T P. KENNEDY, M,D,, J • (Member of the Britieh Medical 1 -6.ssociatifta) COLD MEDALLIST IN MEDICINE, I Special attention paid to Dteae o women and children; OFFION ouns to 4 p.m.; 7 to9 p.m, W. T. Holloway D.D.S., L.D.S. Graduate oe Rosa! College of Dental Zurgeons of Tor- onto, and Honor Graduate of Dent -al De't. of Toron- to University. Latest improved methods in alt branches of Dentistry. Prices moderate. Satisfaction guaranteed. &TO:nee in Beaver Block. Closed Wed'y. afternoons in June, July, Aug. ARTHUR J. IRWIN D.D.S., L,D.S. Doctor of Denetal Surgery td the eh- nsylvania College and Licentiate ol Dental Surgery of Ontario. 011ie° over Poet Oftice-WINGBAM Closed Wed'. afternoons in June, July, Aug. „. DICKINSON & HOLMES Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Ofeice I Meyer Block Wingham. E. L. Dickinson Dudley Holmes RYANSTONE ' BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR Idoney to loan at lowestrates, Office BEAVER BLOCK, 7-95, WINGHAM, WELLING -TON NUTUAL " FIRE INS. CO. Established 180. Head Mae GUELPH, ONT, meks taken on elle:lasses of insurable pro perty on the cash or premium note eystem, JAMES GOLDIE, CHAS. DAVIDSON, President. Secretary. JOHN RITCHIE, AGENT, WINGRAM, ONT J. J. ELLIOTT, V. S. • Honorary Graduate, Ontario Vet- erinary College. Mee end TniirmarY, corner Victoria and Minnie Streets, Wingham. Day and night calls prompt- ly attended to, Telephone eonneotion. WINGITAM SAW MILL IIIcLBAN & SON All kinas et rough and armed... LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES APPLE BARRELS. Hard and Soft Slabs, also a large quantity of dry hard- wood for sale, delivered. Telephone Orders Promptly attended to. McLean & Son SO YEARS' EXPER1ENCM TRACE IVIARIts DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &c. anyone sending a sketeb and deseriptien may nntekly ascertain our opinion free whether au layention is probably patentable. tornmentra- ttonsstriettyeenndenttal, Handbook ort Patents soot -frets Okiest agency for securing.patents. Patents taken thronan Munn & Co, receive Special mate, nil -bout charRe, in tee Scientific American. A. handsomely illustrated Weekly. TArdest. sir. ciliation a any scientific journal. lTr ins, y,,3 a airtigriadths, $1. reee 8018roodwat,New York Branch Once, 125 r St,. Washington, D. C. Write for out intereqing books "Invent. Or's Help" and " How you are swindled." Send us a rough sketch or Model of your in- vention orimprovement mid v,te will tell you Ire our opinion us to whether it is ptobably patentable. Rejected appliestionshaveoften been successfully prosecuted by us. We tended fully equipped offices in Montreal , and Washington ; am qualifier; us to prompt. ly dispatch work and quickly seem Pntente am brold as the invention. Thgbest references furnished. Patents procured throttgli Illation & Ma- rlon recelva spsclantiotlee Without tharke in over too newerepers distributed throughout / the tistitinion. Speelolty I -Patent businesa of IVianufae- Were anti Engineers. MARION St MARION Patent Expert o and Sallettors. Liam ,, j New York We teriee, notated e Manta Mde,Vvitshineteri DX 4..."^"....,,,..,,,,,,..,...........,,, NATIONAL ANTHEM. Something About Former Illnesses of the King, By Herself in Priumeee League Gazette. imiwwww.wwwwwwimewwwwmAwww.wommimwmiwimmA The reason is not far to Seek, from my earliest eleitibood in (Ian - oda, I was told of "Our Queen," of her greatness; and goodness, and that, grand end powerful as else was It was her wonazdilY heart, lier Mo- therly pare for all her peoplea, and her sense of duty, which came before all else in her mind, wh1ca made her worthy of tile love and loyalty Qf every man, woman and elithi in her dominions, As almost a boby I sang "God Save the queen,' and, as I grew older and knew all that it meant, small won - tier that I bave always sung it with all my heart, for I eonsider it a "prayer," and all my Ceenullau asso. Mations with it were but doubly etrengthened, when after havaig re- vered her as a queen and woman I (same to this country and soon after was hunored by -tee personal and sin- cere tnterest, and, I may eyen say, the true friendship which our be- loved Queen deigned to accord to nie then, and which reinained unite terrupted until the last. I also love to slog the anthem be- calm it is at once a beautiful and it stirring melody, and one which is Perfectly written for a eopramo voice. I have sung it in Australia, where) at Adelaide, I arrived late, and on a bright starlight night I was forced to go out on the balcony of our Ma tot and eIng to 80,000 people who had collected below "God Save the Queen," From the ehanee of cold had feared to sing out of doors at night, especially also after a. long journey, but they told me the vast erowd beneath our windows "Insist- ed," and my refusal was Impossible. The enthusiasm was indescribable and so touching that I hardly know oven now how I was leble to cone - mend my voice to the end. Again, in South Alaimo I had an extraordinary experienee or its et- feot On the Zulu, I had gone to see the Teirabertee compound at the Ottumwa mines, end, before leaving., the natives (who ere OftipitYyed in the mines) °roweled rune us de- manding 'that I should sing, so, standing on it cheer surrounded closele by a mass of Zulu e and Other nativee, I sang them "God Save the Queen." Their loyalty and excitement hardly knew any bounda and they followed us to the gates, testifying their feelings by snots wild war -dance 'gestures as might have made a nervous person Teel beetle slight trepidation. 13ut the 'true feeling of loyalty and de- votion to their "Great White Queen" wee there, and so deeply there that it eleiteed away all lighter and pereonal thoughts, and was, indeed, that "tottich or nature" which Made us, one and all, "kin." Were the sentiment not already existent in my mind the warmth of Colonial loyalty would Welke° the feeling or prayer; but French Canadlane aro the most" Meal of alt Canadian, irnd I am one. With them it le, as Sir Wilfrid Laurier has so finely flake the "loyalty of gratitude," and when 1 ging the National Anthem now for His Majesty, the son of her who le gone from us, I pray for him, and that her influence for good may O'ershadow him still, and that in my own country and in all the Ring's dominions all the peoples may be "hoppy and glorious," and that "God" will "save" and "bless" the Meg!. ANTS TO APPLE GROWERS. &ereaiRegfeOeeekseed*...ed'oee2a,"--egeRdefRaeeragefe.eeeZee..e.eeee-,e.e2-2.er-g2"-Ce4 Department of Agriculture, Ottawa, Juno 24,, 1902, In the older parts of Ontario, such its the couatie:s at Middlesex., Perth, Oxford and Brant, as well us a por- tion of Huron, .where the best apples grew in times gone by, -to-day there is a great neglect of young tree plant- ing as well as pruning, and the nat- ural result is a, diminution in the quantity of apples grown and a de- cline in the quality of the fruit pro- duced. Now in Grey, in th.e north- eastern part of Durhara, and in thq county of Northumberland, the young orchards are just about equal to the older ones in number, showing that planting is there going on vigorously. In the former eases there is no doubt the trees were planted from some twenty-ftve to forty years ago, when there was no exact knowledge of, and, perhaps, but little experience in, varieties -when early apples were itt demund, when the soil was new, when insect pests and fungeus dis- eases were rare, and when the only skill required was simply to take the fruit. Now the farmers have got the idea that there is no money to be got out of apples, and they let their orchards rue wild, they allow noxious ineests to Multiply and fungous dis- eases,/ to run their course, with the inevitable results that the orcharde are almost ruined. In the Georgian Bay district, hotvever. it le not diffi- cult. to persuade farmers that or- eharde can be made, to pay; but everyone should understand that to be a smocessful apple grower he must choose suitable varieties, adopt °Mae eultivation, pursue systematic prun- ing, spray at the proper time in the proper ban.nner With the proper solu- tions-, and direct careful attention to cover crops. Meng a Good Work. Mr, A. McNeill, acting chief fruit Inspector, is engaged in this work, and this; be how- he teaches the young idea, how to grow fruit successfully, profitably and ready for sale. He arranges a meeting in a central locality and vends from half an hour to an bour indoors lecturing and ans- wering alt sorts' of questions put to him by growers/ and others. Then he proceeds with his audience to a nearby orchard, tvhere lie commences an expedition in search of noxione insects and fungi. Having dlecover- ed a pest (aided perhaps by a mag- nifying glass> be next procee•Is to prepare his Bordeaux mixture, and then sprays the infested parts with the force pump, taking care to de- monstrate as well as to explain the difference between showering or iprink-ling, and actual, speaying; for while spraying with poisons is sal- vation to a plant, tree, or fibrilla, showering or sprinkling means very often destruction, All insecticides and fungicides ethould tall on vege- tation in the most delicate rpray, otherwise the trees may be injured. Mr. McNeill toned in hie.recent tour through the counties elready named a general belief) that there were n0 burets this year doing any damage. Ills magnifier soon diseovered lents of Inseam. The oyster -shell bark Mime 18 very prevalent; the cigar ease bearer In some districts was quite numerous; the tent caterpile " Inc was in evidence, but not seri- - onely ; and the canker worm in some localities was very ptentlful bat for multitude) the bud moth sim- ply swarmed. The result of finding thews pe8te whore they were Rap- poeell to 1)9 completione by their ab- senc0 so farnelt the farmerthat efr. McNeill could havn sold a gross; of magnifiers on the spot, It was an ()beast leseon that will never be forgotten. It does not alsoe.ye fall to the lot of a Government to witness Me good results of missionary Zeal; but here In Canada we are eonetantly reap- ing where we have sown'; and eatr. MeNeill reports that tho result of the forward policy' of the Minister of Agriculture bas already in the fruit section led farmers in the old- er parboils of Ontario to abandon their former slovenliness, and to go In for , Crean convene... Weille in the newer districts the fruit growers taexeseives so appreciate what has been doee to help them that they have become living expon- ents of the same policy. ,To seeere and matnitain profitable apple cultivation after following out the work necessary, everything de- pend upon the variety cultivated. Undoubtedly winter varieties are ehose that are paying best. Tbe four varieties of apples that are receiving the most attentionnow are Baldwins, Bent Davis, Greenings alai Spies. As these varieties cover only the fall and winter months, it is eortalidy not wise to overlook en- tirely the early sorts; because there must spring up a market for the earlier sorts as soon as the others have got the market seourely. Attending to Grafting. Top grattiug .bas received a great deal of attention thsts spring. The average farmer thinks there Is Rome mystery about grafting, So it is very gratifying this year to find hire amenable to creature on the point. It is gratifying to discover bow many farmers are 'beldam up graft- ing, for where it has been) put into practice it has been eminently suc- cessful. One Ontario farmer, who had never grafted it tree in his life, after hearing Mr, ateNeill's lecture some lame ago, top grafted a large number in his orchard, and his losses evert sander three per cent. of the number grafted. Grating should he made a part of every " boys education. Notwith- standing all 'the care the nursery- man can give to hie stock, serious mistakes will be made in the varie- ties; and if for no other mason than that every lad should know how to perform so simple au oper- ation as grating. Treee hage inelividuallsre i.set as animate have; and for reaso; g that we cannot explain, ont tree with apparently no better Monica than another growing by its side, of the game variety, will be prolific, while the dther lir comparatively bar- ren. 'I'lte Best Orchards. The beet orcharde of the future will be those that ane planted with some hardy vigorous stock like our Tallman • Sweet, or Macmahon's White; and When therm have formed a stack ahead at two or three years old they limy be top grated from selected trees. As the nurserynian• practices pro- pagation he ex,ercises no disorimin- ation, because hifr cuttings are from productive and non -protium five treee alike, and more often than not they • are taken .from trees that have not come into bearing at ail, consequently he must perpetuate a good many pour specimens. The mari who top grafts bus an pportunity to examine a thou - and treee, and, aeleeting the best • can top graft hia whole orchard witli the confident •expeetation of having nearly ale 1U trees ap- proach very near th.e merit that one in the thousand that he se- lected for hie grafting. Ono reason whytop grating cam net be recommended to the aver- age farteer indiscrInilnately IS that he cannot be always indurate' to Ito the work at the proper time or in the proper manner. He cannot it!. ways bee trusted in the 'Danner of ,election. And he le too apt to be carelefir and indifferent, leaving the greater number of Ids trees un- grafted, to the waken; detriment of the tesininetry of the orchard. Some Stories. A mnart retort was heard at tt Iiulicef Club the other day. Why, add a toll, graceIld giri,. to n lady fonnewhat tier elder, whom judged to be it widow, and who had itiet become engaged to it military man, "I thought the major was the lase man you'd ever marry." The Ottiee Woman finilled and there \Vita' a 'world Of commisera- tion in that smile, "My dear girl," she said, quietly, "I' devoutly hope he will be," r A Mould of rtcrults were getting rid of mine ammunition on the range the other dny, tLiht the .sergeant in charge began to use strong language as the firing precealed and the target re. in, 1 hied it non ne turod. "what! missed again- ?" Ito roared, ttF2 an unfortunate reorutt mit up the died kir the eeventli Consecutive time. '(rat Scott 1 1 ieN't believe you cOvld hit, a furniture VGA." "Oh, you nexxliet crow', etergeant,e retorted the recruit, "you Missed it train yesterday," The Story Is !tied of a jeryietan who outwitted it judge, and that without lyinglie rote into an amaze +court in it deeperate htirry, ratite out of breath, and exestainised "011, jlidgee if you can, pray excuse nvo. 1 don't know Wbieli will die first-- Wito or toy daughter 1" "Dear me, thatee sad," stied the te- nement hulge. "Certainly you are ex cused." The ladies) Meritioned ate still in ex. cellent hmtitle and the juryman boaes that the solution of the problem may be long deferted. • • "Yee," Raid etre. Parvenu, "the Lat- in motto on our family crest means: 'Ono good turn deserves another:Yr i "HOW appropriate!" eecialteled Mrs& 1(ostitate. "Your grandfather, 1 bee o Hover was an aorobat iA clic ejtella" .4wwftwft HE LEADS A RATHER BD .Y LIFE - (London aaprosee King Mimed bas enjuyed remark- ably good health during the eixty years of tile life, with the one In- ception of his serious Mimes Irian typhoid toYer at the end ot 1871. Tale happy fact is due le part to a strong liereditary oonstittition, and in part to the native opeu-air ex- istenee His Majeete lues always led - In both respects Mug Edward re- eenibles hie august mother, Q,Ueen Victoria. He hue been fond of riding and shooting, and latterly has ta,ken meet to motoring. Whenever tlie Reigeneles of hie high potation have enabled Ills Majesty to escape from London, lie has always gone to the eoubtry, where lee hat/ pursued with zest the ordinary avo- eatloas or an, English country gee- tleraan. This healthy habit at ilfe will stand His Ma.) 'ety In good stead duriug bis present eeriouti illness, Mite great illness of the Xing oc- curred in November, 1871. The natio was horrified to hear that the Prince of Wake was down with tegehotal fever, which had carried off his father, the Prince Consort, just ten years previously. The weelc inter- vening between Dm. Oth and 13th Was a period or iterrible anxiety. The agonizing thought could leaver have hese abeeet from; the minds of Queen Victoria and the Princess of Wales, our preseet graeloue Queen, that the date of the crisis, Dec. late, wae the• tenth anuiversary of the Prince Consort's death: But the fates svere propitious. CM that date re- covery commenced, the strong con- Stitutioe of the Prince of Wales, as het then was, asperted itself, and on Feb. 27th, 1872. the PrillO0 Went With Queen Vietoria and the Prin- case of Wales to a public, thanksgiv- tog service in St. Panas Cathedral. A man is never to etrong after typhoid fever' as he was before, and no doubt this acute illnese of thirty years ago may be a remote cause for the present gaave symptom. Nevertheless, from 1872. onwards His Majesty has been spared all serious maladies. pit Jan. 14th, 1892, his eldest eon, Prince Albert 'Victor, clied from malig- rant influenza at Sandringham, His death was a terrible blow to his paronte, and the King felt the shock most severety. Knoe-eap Fractured. In Jelly., 1898, thedRing was stay - lug with Baron Ferdinand de Roths- child at Wadeodon Manor, in Buck- ingeanuelare, when H1 Majesty sap- ped on tae marble staircase, and fell dowe, fracturing his kneecap. It was eome weeks before the injury was completely cured, but by the middle of August recovery was re- ported, though Ha Majesty. contin- ued to walk with a ,stiek for mom little time longer. In the autumn for the last twent,y. years anti more Ring Edward has paid a vielt to Bromberg to drink the waters. Once or twice atarien- ba,c1 hiesi been visited, but the waters there did not agree se well with His Majesty, These vit.its have not been ormasioned by /any threatened illness, but was merely undertaken partly as a rest (sure and partly res a tonic areet the ea:acetone of a London eeason, when as Pearce of Wales, His Majesty, was a hard - worked repreeentative of the Throne, discharging all the more arduous ceremonial duties on behalf of hio august mother. The fact that his sister the Em- prees Frederick of Germany a nd his brother the puke of EdInburg,h (the Duke of Saxe -Coburg and Gotha as he wee latterly called), both died of cancer has given rise to constant rumors that His Majesty has been similarly a f recited -rumors that grew in circumstantial detail and exag- gerated seriousness whenever His Majesty was confined to the House fog a, few tiara. It le known that his throat has been weak and ale° his manner of epeaking (Jeep and guttural -two ctr- eumetancee which have ceased the gossipe to locate the malady, in that region. But the King's phyeiciame have explictly dened that theee is any truth in than rumors. The ellght operation performed On the larynx about a year ago was only to remove a email and com- paratively inoeuouo growth froin the eoeal chords. liard-Worked Mau, Sinop Ring Edward ascended the throne he has probaktly been the hardest -worked man le the Unite.] • Kingdom. Not only has he discharged all the usual hellos State routine work which the kioveamign la bound to perform, but His Majesty has ta,ken the cleorrest personal Interest In all Valle coueected with hie Corona - Wen. It met also be remembered that Ch e royal bousehold has been remod- elled, and the eetablishruente have been pat on it different footing. Wind- sor Castle, Buckingham Palace, and the other toyal palaces have been redecorated and eefurnirthect All partioulare have bow persoilally sup:rehired by the Rang. • Moreover, the war has been Very trying to III0 Majesty, who most ear- nestly desired that there should be peace throughout the Empire on Cor- onation Day - In the spring or 'this 'yenr the hard work Was telling on Ms Majesty, and Instead of going to the south of France as originally intended, he went Lor a quiet mailer) in the royal yacht along the trouth coast ed 'Eng- land, and as far as it wits possible took a thorough rest. But even thee official papers pursued hina. Still, Hie efejesty returned from lite little holiday feeling .very -Moll re- freehett. Since 'then his life lies been it most busy one Vvergthleg, how - 0V01, Went on Well until the night of Saturday, 1une 14, When, after at- tending th.e tattoo at AldeterhOt, he was taireu 111, The Court •Cirettlar of unriel,y, aline 15, stated: "Ills Majesty the Meg was enable to leave his rooin to -day, Owing to an attriek Of htinbago murk. ed. by a chill," We now knOW the tont nature Of the ilineee. It was riot luinaago, but an n:beoesei in the abdomen. WIllre1s 'Plymouth lama. 4.gehool teacher in one of the (lintel -dug ,rural enberlie of where fanny gardening and the raising of "Plillocitilphist fowl" are general Among 'the atudeente, recited tot thr. elate; the story of the lerallrig of 'the Pilgrims, :gel esthe ehiltirea hael,been taking tip the Work, Oho te- queeted earls acitolItr tA) try and draw front lite imagination a picture of the l'Iyinoluth Book. Then it WAS that the little fellOW got tut and rale:cal his hand, " Willie, wlmit Is it ?" coke Ito teacher. knfeent, yOul AValit A heti r a reenter (intent ?" Canto tilo nti- xpeeted reply. SuRday School. ft 13,N A BIN AI41.11eSSON NO, 111. JUL, 20 1902, The Ten teenuntese laix.12no:riut-s1-7-,Dutiee of Moo- dfinIfetnilt elasMaIrmeorizt neethig link between trie first arid • second tablet; of the law, axle pro- perly belonge to both. Wiledoo liast put it in the first table. 12. Ilonor•-This means More than to ober, it le to treat with raver- enee and ateection. Thy heti= and thy mother -There is it degree or effectionate respect which is owing to parents, that no person else oan PrePerly chain. For it GORShlar- able time parents etand as it were in the place or God. to their eltildreli, and therefore rebellion against their lawful commands has been cOnSidered as rebeliton against God. That thy days MaY be long -The apos- tle Calls this the Mat commandment witb promise. fapii. vi. te It is the only ono in the clecalogue to which a special promise Is attached. From this we may learn, In some measere, heel important the duty 10 in the sight of Goa. Most of thee° who come to an untimely end are obliged to confese teat breaking this com- mandment and the (earth was the brill. cause of their ruin. 'Upon the land, ette-The nation shall be per- manent in the promised land. The in- dividual Ilfe shall be long, implying happiness, peace and proserity. , DISObet110110C tO parents leads to other acts of disobedience, and the laws of Goa and tau country are ruthlessly broken.; and this, more than all other things, destroys hap- piness and eleortens lite. Children should bonor their parents, because God has commanded it. Blessings are at t ached to it. ire af f ect I on prompts it, Self-respect demands It In the future they will twee a like reepect shown therm Jesus has set it noble example in this regard. The sixth commandmene. 13. Thou Shalt not Id11-"Thou shalt do no murder," -It. V. Tine murderer is re- garded as boo who wickedly des- troys God's ipaage le mau, and so most lamely assaults God Himself. Suicide is accordingly probibited her this oommandment. The Hebrew; leg- islation everywhere enhances the sacredness of human, life. All the pre- cepts in chapter /ode 12-30, aim to guard life from violence. It any man by carelessness or nteglect occasion- ed the cleeth of another he brought blood guiltiness upon, Ills bowie. The person who takes his own life per- forms a cowardly fend wicked act. Dissipation, drunkenness, and SU'S against the body that utnifit it for usefulness wee shorten life are vio- lations of this commandment. It is generally supposed that there are cases where the killing of another might be juotifiable, as, 1. In the execution of justice, 2. In, self de- fence. But evoll 111 this there is a difference of opinion among good metTo seventh oommandment, 14. Thou ehalt not commit adultery - The violation of this commandment mean e the -destruction, of the home and family, Lostitation ordained of God and neciessary to the building up of Ms klingdom in, the earth.' "This commandment foleatds all acts of urooleanness, with ell those fleshly • lusts which produce those acts and war against the soul, and all those thoughts or practices wthtch cherish anal excite thoee fleshly lusts, as looking In'order to lust, sahich Christ has expressly ferblcitlem A body filled with loathsome diseases; a person reduced to extreme beggary (Prose vi., 26) ; a. life completely wrecked morally, physically, intellecturilly ; it being burning with lust, about to suffer eternally •in "the lake that barramtb with etre and brim- etone"-these are some of the ter- rible pun:legitimate visited upon those who are guilty of this most heinous The Eighth Commandment. 15. Thdu shalt not steal -The rights ot properte ere of divine •appoint- ment, and we are to refrain from claiming) as our own that which now belong& to anothete-Truna hull. The rigb.ts Of property tney be violated. 1. By taking propeete without the knowledge of the own- etr ; or theft. 2. Dy taking the pro - pert), •of another by consent, when violently obtained. a By consent fraudulently obtained, or cheating; either by taking advantage of an- o'ther' ignorance, or by misrepre- sentation, 4. By withholding what belongs to another; whether it be taxee or duties, of giving short weights or measure, or withholding what es borrowed or found. 5. By paying too email wages, or by not earning the wages WO receive-. 6. By beating clOwn those who sell, so n.61 net to pay a fair profit, or by chargirg exorbitant prices. 7. By monopolies and trusts which -son- filet wetlt the rights of ludividuels arid oppress the poor. 8. By social- ism and anarchy which tend di- rectly or indirectly to damper°, plenty what rIghtfully belongs to another. -5. By gambling, raffling, taking shares in lotteries, on en- tering into any ot the modern ex- pediencies wbereby eomething 114 =entail for nothing. 10. By any busienes 'which Injures the life, lib- erty ea property of others, Inich es selliug liquors, obscene pictures, vile books, este. 11. Be Indulging in any Malt svbereby we are unfitted tor meet our obligatione, 00 suppot thee° who may be dependent upon 1163. se Ninth COmmandment, 16. False wianese-Thie is the worst form of lying end inchulea all other forma " Truthful/sees is the only condition em which human Intereourse is pee - ethic, and it Iles at the foundation of all Wrenn:el character." Lying Is ono of the worst sins, because it leads to the emintassion of other rens, and eteeks to cover wrong- (1°ilit TlTenth Commandment. 17. Thou shalt not eovet-Thie is the only ono Of the IcoMmandments which treats solely of sins of the mind and heart, and in so doing it etrikee ftt the very root of all Rim tor every eln is born of desire (Mark vil. ,Tae. 14-15), and there Would be to sin eotarnitted if tide momenta Mont were ererfeotly kept. Rom. vie 7.--Torld, The word covet oecurs Rome twenty theme in the Hebrew Reriptur nt 4, and is commonly tamer - Int ed desire, PRA.CTICAL The relations) we Rustriel to God as one comaion fatally 01111809 00 to he related to eitelt other in a peen - liar sense. Because ot tufa- tione Certain duties neeessarily de- volve upon us toward each other. Wet have in Olean RIX eonimendmente it cOrelensed °Utilise of these duties,. 'They nenotant to rt continent on .the great commandment, "Then ishalt lotto thy neighbor as thySelt," Parental reepect. Our first duty among men lit to our parents. Their elahno to our honor and respect are due to the fact that under GM they gave us an oilstone°. They were to titt for several years In the photo of tied and tlumed eetir aecolintabllity Until we came te a knolwiedge of goad and evil. The import of bile voninizindnieirt 0090 ia the feet belt it is 'the Only olio in the dem,- logne attended hY a "premise. Title coramanantent IMpllee -obeeierice W parents. It 10 restricted to one ex- ception cellY. It meet be "113 the Lord," that is, disobey them only. when their requIremente are con- trary to God's requirement:0. Regard tor home 110. Heinen Ute is preelonS in tee eight of God, bee 0111100 he Is the author of it. It is protean in the sight of men Ina armee God: liars giveo theca a love for It. To take human life oxide human proles:boil and energies which are of great value to them. Thla com- mand forbid& nll Works carried on merely for the extension of it IcIng- dont or tin commerce, ale* all °rim- inal nealeet, which may involve the neediest% lose of life. Soviet pulite. aoultery is wrong bemuse it abolishes the Rene -fay or marriage, anti degractee the mime, both of which are essential elements of good ,eoclety. One Imo said, "ands la put before the sixth command- inent hy our Saviour (Mark r, 11)),be- rause our chastity should be as dear to uo me our lives, end we should be 1143 much arald olethat wbich de- filing the body as of that whin's, 11 0- 4)troys it." This oonnnand forbids all unclauste convereathen and 11- clentiono thougbte and desires. It also Implies butt we refrain from alt things which might euggest im- parts thoughts and 'desires, as tbe theatre and dance hall, Stealing. 'This is the wrongfully taking the property of another. Ties may be done in various ways: By taking the nelvantage of the Ignor- ance of another svhile buying; bY swing false weights and measures itt selling ; by overfeeding or over - watering stook before weighing to another ; misrepresenting geode; failing to Mum their defects to pur- elmeers ; charging exorbitant pricee, even thoaga combined with othere to anise the price: withholding debts When it le Tensible to pay them; Nettling stolen goods, or failure to return toot goods, or to make an effort to find the owner ; holding and using railroad and street car tlekete overlooked by the condu.ctor. No businese custom Justifice me In etealing. Bearing fate teetlmony. We may be done in a judieial sense. Regard- less of the import connected with the case or. however just the cause may be, there Is no oxcuse-for lying under oath. The spirit of the com- mand ie violated when one is untrue to tho confidence placed in them by another. Promising with no expec- tation of meeting- the proznis.e. • Covetousness. This Is an Inordin- ate desire to possess what belongs to another, It is one way of steal- ing, in the sight of God, It is sinful In that it ie evidence of discontent that would find satisfaction in the fakirs, of anotber.-Seannel K. 'Wheat - lake. ++++++,/++++++,•-......k+++++ I BRIEF NOTES OF PARIS MODES. (BY ORAN= CLAIRE.) ,r++04+++++++4•4+++++++++++.s. The most eharnang neck chains I have lately wine storcres im. Paris are made of Platinum, ornamented with little marguerites of paste diamonds placed at equal disia,nces ititernate- ly large pearl. The ornament which hangs from this chain or "Ban -. tor" is a, large Openwork heart, whose shape is outilniod with these same braliant little daisies, the cen- tre consisting eg a slender interiac- lag monogram in diamontia ioaic- tinies old-fashioned jewels, long hid- den away fa their cases, natty be brought out and made to do duty as a "haute rouveaute" for these chains and pendants. The dentatel summer weather we havebeen subjected to this season has brought out some novel MIR.- a favorite' hue for a good large dome- asissiebioesvraenrdo.r. ent wer which will stand Cabbage green, is shaped "en cas." As it is fully frilled at the edge, and it has ti, natural colored stalk -I mean stiek I -it truly bears a fair resemblance tothe homely vegetable above named. I saw the likeness completed by a carved leaf fa painted enamel wiliest) cl000rated the handle fin company with a pinked out "choue of green silk. Tbee, • we are going back, it seems, to the veritable umbrellas of tlie Eighteenth Century -purple, steel blue, white, orange red and 'lading blue." They ave of thick, un- lined taffetas, with solid handles. They wet be awful to travellers and excursionists as a protection for their trim cos:tut/lee, both frotn the over -kindly sun rays and twin a shower, or two, for the colors are guaranteed fast, For eventing wear I have oome a.crotes smelt 'chic lettle shoes 111 cloth of gold material, a long slender fatal)°, math a tiny ehons of lace or a paste battoe .finthelting off the toe. Fair automobiliste are going int for 'high laced red boots this year, or Cromwell shoos In the same braliant line, 'worn with red silk stockings, Rather a ittephietopliettan, Mee, You will say 1 Anything for a novelly. Flowered merlin; "mousseline jar- dlietero," es the Frau% call it, eto loved by La. Pompadour, is agate a eutrore, for hot weativer frocks, it is worn over very then taffetas of ba- tiste, generally eh, pale pink. The ample fuilevese at the bottom of the skirt reduces itself at the top to a Muesli of gatliere at tho back of the walla. Three satin ribbons start front them tend mount up under the arum to lose themselves in full but- terfly bows on, the dliest. The eleevett end in sabots of lame and a grace- ful beau is draped round the elioule dors. A. Crook of ties sort serves a multitude of enaposes, and has the advantage of Mediate 'itself to 'home manataeture. Over yellow Or pale green Ft Is equally pretty, and eo wet lOoklag, almost as refrosiang as iced drink I Walet belts made of string or twine are the lateat things sent forth trent one of the Paris houses"; they look pretty with linen and /gime gowns, and are usually Ilnislied With it slate pie metal plaque, with a classie sign beaten on it. White kid bette retail their hold on the popular feminine fancy. A. new little coat Is ille "fatietglitn," Very emeiettish and Mile, bite toget " thio thus -nese," welell it demancle. it Must be out by "one who knows," otherwise it miming bre mark, It Is fereight In the front, vague at the brink, not fitted at all, and yet eliaped 111,--"Vieue Verree I" There is a recrudescence of Spill- glei embroidery. All the frocks are literally Weighed down by it this year. Lnrge deelems in retie are deem in it. Louis XV, bowie Remelts, lattioe work-overy effect la Peen In thei belltierit glamor and glitter. ThlH Wee Apeolally retnarketi in the ow 13'I prepared for the norenat'on. By the way, Queen. A.lexendride gown, merle up in Parte, wee on chow there for twenty -fettle homer. nne etreirraft of people " I It eel Ito "CreatrIcee went by spt4- , lel train to London X atit tOld jillE MARKETSI Toronto U.arteere' starreat. July 3.1. -There were only WO bushels of oats received. 01.1 tileetrect market this morning. Tiley Sold at 50 to 501-20 per bushel. litay-Wae steady, 3. load of om eating at $13,50 per ton. There was alms 1 toad of uew arty. Ude sold at $11 per ton. Them luis Imea 14 drop in the price ot mesAs WM If. Beef bimiquariers are off 5110 to $3, pert cwt.; forequer- ter% $2 per wt.; eholce earcaeses, 00e per cwt.; ommon eareaesee, 50c to $3. per cwt.; mutton, le per lb.; lanebe, lee to lo per the WA settees, lo per lb. • • t Wheat, wnite, 72 to fric ; red, 72 Ito 81)0; goose, 68 to 712o; spring, 67 to 80o; ryes lee to (320; barley, malt, 531-2 to 60 1-2o; barley, feed, 53 to 54e; crate, DO 4.0 501-2e ; peas, 74 1-2o; hay, banally, $13 to fele; coma, $8 to- $9; gamma $8 to $9 ; butter, pound robe, la to 17c ; crockee 12 1-2 'to 3.40; egge, now laidl 15 to re cents. British hive Slocle 514%0(0. Doodoo, 4"uay 12,-0attle- To -day Ameatean mettle are urnethanged at; trona la 1-2 to 150 per, lb.; refraeer- ator. beef le fit -mer at from 13. to 12c, t ()loose Al a4.1404,6• Cornwall, Jelly 12, -At the Cerise wail Cheese Board to -day 2,2iT2 eheese were odfereci and sold; 1,031 were Canadians White, 1,155 Canad- ian colored end 63 American. The 'elate sold at 9 8-8o wad colored at 9 7-16c, leaett yeaa at bele date 1,- 678 white &old a,t 9 1-8o aed 241 colored at 9 1-ee. • Belleville, Jelly 12. --At the C110080 Board hold bore to -day there. were offered 2,600 boxes, of vrtech 875 were colored. Sales as follows: Brat - kin, 185; Etodgeon, 485; Alegre/(a, 2e0; Sprague, 340; Alexander, tele); all sold at 9 1-2c. Mager/eh, 855 at 9 Del6o. ellerriebterg, July 12,4Five hundred elieese were boarded here toalay. Moe; 9 7-16o, • • ; • Toronto Fruit Markets. Streaseberries are growleg scarcer aid sold to -day at 7 to 7 1-2c. kenckleberriee are now offering. We quote: Apples, per basket, 50e to 51; bananas; per bunch, $1.50 to $2; orange% Sorrento, $1 to $5.50 per box • leeuon.s, Messina, $e3,50 to $3.5e ; Florida bineapplea 80's to 42's, $8.25 to 58.50 per case; loose, according to 141ZE,, 5 to 1 -lo; toma- toes, 4.-besket carrier, $1 to 51.10; Ottreavbe.rries, per quart, 7 to 7 1-2c); cherries; per basket, 75c to 5L25; California apricot,. $1.50 to $2 per crate; Califorrda peaches, $1.50 to $1,75 per •eaee ; watermelons, 25 to 40s) ; gooseberries, 40 to 50e per bas- ket ; red .currante, per b teket, 75.1; black currants, per basket, 51 to raspberries, per box, 8 to Ile; muskmelons, per crate, $3.75 to 54; leickleberriee, p•er basket, $1.24, Leading Wilma Markets. Following are the closing quota" teens at important wkeat centres to -day,: Cash. 1 apt, Chicago — 78 1-2 New York ..... ,.. -- 78 8-4. Toledo '77 8-4 76 . Duluth, No. 1. N. • 7613-8 73 le4 Duluth, No, 1 hard79 1-8b — Toronto Live Stook MaricJt. Export cattle, choice, per cwt. $5 00 to$ 0 50 do meditim 4 25 Ls 6 00 do cows . 350 ti 400 Butchers' cattle, picked •5 25 to 0 GO Butchers' cat.le, choice 4 26 to 5 25 Butchers' cattle, fah 3 75 le 4 25 do common 4(31 to 45) do bulls •,2 54 to 3 25 Feeders, shortaeop 4. 00 to 5 00 do Medium3 AO to 4 0) Stockers, 1,000 to 1,100 Ms• 3 75 to 1 00 Mitch cows, e tell 25 00 to 45 00 Sheep, ewes, per imp . 3 40 to 3 10 Lambs, spring, each •2 50 to 3 50 Hoge °hole% Per Owt , 7 25 to (t 00 Bogs. light, per out 7 05 to 0 00 Begs,fe,t, per ow t..... ... 7 tiO to 0 00 Bradstrvn.s, un rrado. The more seasonal le weateee has resulted be a better feellag In whole - sato trade elec:es at M Jittr al t his week. Now that the weather has become seasenably hot, retailere ate reporting larger aides and the chanceof having to carry over largo stocks are smaller. At Quebec in 'wholesale trade eir- ei -a bugtness is rz perted fa riy good and fee orders are saki to he win- ing in as well as past seasons. Col - aa a rule, are reported fa r for the season. At Toronto this week there has been a very fair movement to wbolevale trade. The ftrinnees for staple goods le adding to the general confilenee felt tri wholesale and retail circles. A good movement for Vas seaeoe of the year is reperted, accordear to Bradstreet s advisees, al Hanaltoie itt seasonable lines as web as in fall goods, The jobbers have already bexikeci large orders for the fall trade, and °ening to the gool pros- pects for -the crops there- LEI R. great deal of oonfidence manifested in the outlook for the fall anti winter trade this year. The wbolesale firms find it at easy matter to maintain erica' and there is little or no ma- ting In quotations to induce pere charms. The outlook for trade is gen- erally considered pronileing. Wennipeg trade advices: There hr. hig demand for-. labor and the masses will apparenely have plenty of money to spend the waling sea- son. Trade at tee Paoille Coast con,. tree is improving. At London, as repented for Brads street a there is a fair deemed for fall goods, the excellent prospects ahead having Induced liberal buy. Inge At Ottawa th.ere has hee.n an Im- provement In the demand for hot weather goods this week. The ob- bers ars beer with the fall trade nowt and it appears that in wore Tnere the orders exteei those beokee at this thee it year ago. The Pros- pects; 100 trade are good. A QUESTION OP CONSCIENCE. • "Seem folks," 8ald a i:Orie Ciork, "are too bagesit, Nolo, Pee had 804110: body cenni lh to inte when the limer was standing by, so/nobody that lsealend houglitaas:re: othieg of nee the day beleme, and toted ever two o brniulea‘e'llphltIciliatglialinc!ekft.;"1;°t:(1°aY10111.(18 11;4)(16 "Ito couldn't ricst, yosi sne, that man, until he'd got that two cents off his eonRciencie anri returned it. But In getting rid of (het Marl himself he simply shiftel it onto me. Here's the boss standing by when that two cents in returned; and the toss Rays to hininelf, With hie Gyp Ozi OM: " `Wm yea make it mietrilo• of two cents, enuel make one of two dotterel," and SO you see that super-liontest Inan's return of that two cents may: do nip it tot of harm. ea7trwttultr'lltilitlfselpft e‘ivoititt:ct,li t t 111V01 dotal avant tri ho too blatiled hen - est. A Man earl be toe, honest and S i oilIt:va Illti!tiereto•if 1(13(11'tcrIllfplers. that be "I Agee 1 fr sy that If the bonged 131 is moRt bring twocents back iot bho04 iTs tvruranolA ilr180ntneo thee when the