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The Herald, 1907-06-14, Page 3Canada, Be Strong, (Grant Balfour, Toronto.) • Wake, Canada, awako, awake: Daybreak in gold is born- ' Behold the fire that flecks the hills, And hear the voice of morn. .What people passed to heritage- To heritage like thine? Arise and fill thy destiny, Thy destiny divine. Hold thou the sceptre of the free, Lift not the tyrant rod, Scorn thou the carrion of the night, Lead in the light of God. What is the message morning brings? 0 Canada, be strong! - To him that hath the Lord of The battle doth belong. Tune -St. George's, Edinburgh, Pres- byterian Hymn Book, Ps. Sel. 16. Prayer. . ' Our gracious Father in Heaven, we thank Thee that Thy ancient promise . fails not, and that, year by year, the returning seasons bring their gifts of beauty and blessing. We thank Thee , for the loveliness of the springtime, with its awakening life and its prophecy of future harvest. Help us, O God, to see Thee in Thy works of power and good - meas and to adore Thee for Thy grace. And let the thought of all Thy love efi- kindle in our hearts an answering affec- tiou. Let it be our sincere desire to please Thee and to do Thy service. Make plain our duty day by day, and whatever •our allotted task, enable us to undertake it in Thy strength and to fulfil it for Thy glory. Thus may we follow Jesus Our Saviour, in whose name we pray. Amen. Blessedness of the City of God. (By the Rev. Cornelius P. Ditmars.) Hosts, `y`:'° Air •" �• "d' .< iY lR, •":Li'.. 13' '6tiv.M^."1 Pd.n• •, .P a_Nr ..•..,. TME RIG-iHT PAINT 70 PAINT IR1G1-1T Ramsay's Paints spread easily and smoothly -dry quickly -are true in color -retain their brilliancy -and are always ready for the brush with the least stirring - Por 65 years, Ramsay's Pants have been the standard all over Canada. Use Ramsay°e Paints for all your painting -outside and inside. write us for Post Card series " " showing how Sol= houses are painted. The light of the city shall be Christ'•s face; the joy of the city shall be His preeenee and fellowship. It is to- ward this that we are called to press on bravely against all obstacles, living by faith in Him here; living in obedi- enoe to His commandments; living •whale in this world more and more for the unseen and eternal things of the other world. And it seems to me that a full prepaartion for the presence and fellowship of Jesus Christ upthere de- mande that we seek more and more a sense •of His presence with us here. We must learn to walk with Him, to talk with Him, and to yield to Him a daily heart devotion; then shall we be ready for His companionship up there. And it is possible to be held and con- strained and oornforted by Him, even -when we are not conscious of His pre-.. sence. You know, even with our earth- ly friends, visible presence is not neces- sary to their strongest influence. They may be miles away from us; we may , not see them faee to face for days, yet !does the bond of sympathy and friend- . ship hold us up, constrain us to faith- ' fulness, fill us with hope. Paul was right when he said, "Nothing shall be able -to separate us from the love of Ohrist." It is with us, in us, around us, constraining, uplifting, inspiring us, even when we do not distinctly res.- ' size it. This is the growth of the soul of faith that fits it for the fellowship and ser- vice of Christ in the eternal city of God. In John's Book of Revelation there is one thing that shines back of all, end burns its 'way through all. It is his vision of Jesus Christ. That . flashes out everywhere. It so fills his heart, so masters his spirit that he turns to it again and again. In all bis views of heaven the Divine Al- ' mighty, all glorious King of his life is everywhere present, and .he gives Him always the highest place. And after ' all, is that not the main thing for each one of us to get, viz., a heart vision of Jesus Christ, a sympathetic .conception of His character, a longing to know more of His • grace, a hope to become sharers of His glory? Having seen the Lord, having let His gracious love kin- dle within you, your highest concep- then of heaven and eternal life will be filled with the presence of Christ and you can conceive of no joy on earth or in heaven being complete without His oompanionship and love to crown it One of the meekest and most comfort ing thoughts about the city of God is that Christ will be there. And to the hearts who have felt His saving power and love that is the chief attraction. !We shall be with Him; we shall see Him; we Shall know Him truly there; we shall be like Him when we shall see Him as He is. -N. Y. Christian Intelli- �rsw�, +.akwamirr,+rvs:.i,eaa:a,ra�f, • impenitent is sorry for sin because of 'OSA life giving ozone of the ocean, a sin's consequences. The penitent is i furious wintry blast from the bleak and sorry for sin because he sees it to be a gelid •north rages violently along the, terrible evil and an offence against God, there, .,.so piercing and so biting that Repentance means a change of will. A even the strongest and the,most hardy. man continues in sin because he wills so to do. That is his choice. In repent- ance he, with full purpose of heart, de- termines to turn from •sun to accept the sheltering hedge, and all life appears to pardon and life that God. offers in Christ. be dormant or extinct. The natural His mind has been enlightened, and he sloping , parterre, which. in summer is looks upon the whole matter of sin and gay with the bloom of ,wild flowers, is salvation in a new way. Be has right now but a barren wilderness, without views of what he ought to be. That life and without beauty; the purling right knowledge has moved his affections stream :flowing down through, its midst, and caused him to hate sin and to es- dancing. in soft cadence as it falls over teem God and His grace. But the citadel an obstructing rock and loses itself in of his being is the will. The crisis is the.pebbles of the shore, is struck with passed when the will is conquered. I the gate, cold hand of winter and chang- have thought right, and begin to be ed as it were into stone; and even the rightly impressed; now I will turn from sun itself, faintly endeavoring to shine my wicked ways and come to God. No one can do this unaided. On the other hand no man fails to receive divine belp who sincerely wills to turn from sin un- to God. The sinner does not succeed in gaining immediate victory over every sin in corning to Christ, but he does turn his interests from the kingdom of Satan to the kingdom of God. Repentance means a change of con- duct. The man takes a new soul at- titude. By the determination to be a ser- vant of Christ he enters a new sphere of living. "Repentance is not a mere aet but a habit; it consists in a total change in the tone and character of a man." He henceforth strives to order his life by the will of God. quail' before it; the shore- birds and sea soils take refuge in '-their rock nests, tthie shivering cattle congregate under a geneer. What is Repentance? (By the Rev. Charles A. Oliver). Repentance is a turning from sin unto God. Not all turning from sin is godly repentance, but only that repentance which turns the soul from sin to God. A man may forsake the sin of drunken- ness or profanity and become moral, and ' yet not be a true penitent, because he foils to Christ. Repentance means a change of mind. "Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man las thoughts; and let him return unto the Lord" All truo repeneanee springs from right views of God. The discovery of Godts justice tends to waken a consciousness of sin. The view of God's goodness produces a sense of unworthiness and and faith in God's plan of salvation stirs the soul with pun.pose for a better life. With new thoughts of God there is a change in man's thought about himself. When impenitent he adjudges himself guilty and deserving of punishment, Re"entamalts nee ms a change of feeling. ' penitent admires and loves God. The coast and mingled with the invigorating e-e^°'�^""' "°"'� °""' The irtnpenite»t fears or hates God. 'rho The Good Shepherd. Psalm. xxiii.; John x.; Heb. xiii., 20; Eph. L, 18-23. To an artist Mr. Hake said, "My broth- er, can you paint an eastern shepherd?" "Yes." "And could you paint the sheep following him?" "Oh, yes." "Anel could you paint goodness and mercy' •dollowing the sheep?" "No, that is beyond me." "Ah, my brother, no brush can paint pic- tures equal to those drawn by the Holy Spirit." Mr. Moody said: "Christians should be ashamed to speak of death as the awful deep, dark valley. I want you to notice 'that it is not the valley of death, but only the shadow of death.' What harm can a shadow do? (2) There is light in that valley, for you cannot have a shadow without a light to cast it. Our Lord is our Light. He has gone through the valley before His sheep. " When Mr. Moody was passing away he said, "lf this is death, there is nothing here to terrify. This is bliss. Do not hold me back." His experience proves the truth of our Lord's repeated. statement, "Ac- cord to your faith (belief) be it unto. you." These words are adapted to the tune called, "Martyrdom." Thou are indeed my shepherd, Lord, Then I no want can know; Thou leadast me to greenest sward, Where peaceful waters flow. Thou ever dost my soul restore, Thou bidd'st me seek Thy face, Thou fill'st my eup trill it runs o'er With free ani boundless grace. I know Thy leadings are to bless, In. joyousness and woe, Thou lead'st in paths of righteousness That I like Thee may grow. And when I through death's shadow vale Must pass, Thou wilt be neer; 'Gainst Thee the foe cannot prevail, Then I need nothing fear. British Cattle Markets, London. -Liverpool and London cables ;are firm at 1133 to 13e per lb„ dressed weight; refrigerator beef is quoted at 0 •to •Olee.. per lb. Montreal Cattle Market. Montreal.- Receipts, 400 cattle, 75 ,wiloh cows, 400 sheep and lambs, 1,500 Calves, .1,000 hogs, The butchers were out strong, and trade was good, with not Much change in the prices, excepting that eulves were more plentiful and ,lower in Brice than they were lately. Prime beeves sold at 5% to 00 per lb, but they were not very choice; pretty good cattle at 4%e to near 5?ze, and the common .stook 39'e to near 4eic per lb. :Milkmen's strippers evere numerous and sold at 3x% to' 5c per lb. lelllch cows sold at $25 to $55 each. Some of the calves brought up froreaenoar Quebec were very young and veramall, and sold in lots at about $2 each; ordinary calves sold at $3 to $5, and good wads at $6 to $9 each. Sheep sold at 4% to 5e per lb; lambs at '$3.50 to $5.50 each. Good lots of fat hogs soldrat 7%e per lb. Winnipeg Wheat Market: . Following are the closing quotations on Winnipeg grain futures today: Wheat -June 89ete bid, July Oleec bid, Oct. 9°2eee bid. Oats -June 413¢c bid, July 4leee bid, Oct. 363 c bid. Leading Wheat Markets. July. Sept. New York .. .... 1.033' 1.04 Detroit .. .. .... 98 is 1.011 St. Louis .. ... 'ia Duluth .. .. ... 1.00 1.00 b l Toledo .. .. .. .. 90$ , 98% through the glacial haze, appears to par- Minneapolis . . . . ebee cJsd ticipate in the general benumbing mel- Toronto Farmers' Market. aneholy which pervades all. ! The Grain Market continue.; very dull. And now with an ever augmenting Dec. way materials and construction steal rata also firm in tone and supplies are natio generally .equal to the demand. Country' retail trade is moderatively active.t", , lections from most districts are fair.; Moneyis very firm and •scarce. Predeke is coming forward well, Receipts of hun- ter' are fairly large, but the home de- mand is taking care of all offering. Quebec -Trade while showing a sligeht improvement, climatic conditiono are net favorable and the demand as a rule ie: for immediate wants. City retail treeee is much about the same. Collections ntes generally fair. Building trades are Rebel which is usual at this season. The poae mits issued during the past month a - though numerous, few are for built/lege to exceed $4.000, London-Bueiness has bonen consider- ably affected by the late spring. Der goods houses report the demand for sum- neer ummer lines light. Local industries aro as- tively engaged. The cigar making indus- try is one of the busiest here. Thin branch of industry has shown greag growth during the past few yearn. Hamilton - Trade here tontirme moderately active. The spring sorting trade has not developed any great 'brisk- nese risk-nese but orders for fall goods are heavy.. Collections are fair to good. Ottawa -Business is fairly active nee though spring and summer lines move but slowly. Collections are inclined fo bo quiet. Deliveries of country prodnns' axe ;early large. 1.033' 9734 roar a fierce snowstorm' commences; a suffocating hurricane of sbarp frozen snow driving along in a savage par- oxysm of very fury, as thought the spirit of the north were let loose to de• etroy and to annihilate. And then, as the earth continues her course, all this clec,dening cold yields to the genial warmth of summer, all nature revives, and once more all is radiance and beau- ty. And the deadening, benumbing influ- ence of''the cold hand of the spirit of doubt and infidelity is holding many, gripped' hard and surely in its deadly clutches. They try to retake themselves believe that there is no Judgment Day and live as though there were no life beyond the tomb. But if with an open mind they supplicate, the help and guid- ane'e of the Holy Spirit ai l', 1, He will wisely guide them int i truth and reveal to them" the gosp, ' n op salva- tion through the Redeem . teeenement foresin. Life. Life is more than existence. a mea- sure existence by its length.. ' Life is measured by its depth. One hour of ecstatic joy outweighs a millenium of colorless moments. When the world for- gets this, all things go wrong. Instead of trying merely to keep men in exist- ence, we should try to make theta live. How this view when applied affects the great labor problem! It is not enough that men exist; they must have room to live. An enlarged life is every man's due. This view emphasiers also the work of true religion. Christ came that men might have life, and have it more abund- antly.• The Christian does not simply put in the time; he lives. Joy and peace and power are crowded into an existence tilflat is no longer colorless and dead, but ed of beauty and throbbing with life. "One day in Thy courts is better than a thousand." Let us learn to live, and to help others to live. The Country Church. A QUEER FIND.. DOCTORS FOUND PIN IN WO1'KAI'IPS'° APPENDIX. New York, June 10. -During an opeeso- tion for appendicitis yesterday afternoon at the Flower Hospital the operatingge surgeons were amazed to find a pin stick- ing through the appendix. The patient was Mrs. Anna Al.tonhopp, No. 424 Beat Fiety-first street, forty years old. One load of spring wheat sold at 80e She had been taken to the hospital ere and one load of oath at 62c. pose+:ly suffering from acute appenda•ota- Hay continues very firm, with sales of tis and an operation was decided nesse- 10 loads at $18 to $z0 a ton for timothy. sexy at once. After the appendix. was and mixed is quoted at $14 a. ton. One exposed by Drs. \ oizeaux and Reed tai load of •straw sold at $13 a tan. pin was discovered firmly embedded fee Dreesed hoes are firer, with light quot- ed at $9.75 to $10, and heavy at $9.-0 to $0.50. Wheat, white, bush .. .. $ 0 G0 $ 0 00 Do., red,.bnsh.. .. .. .. 0 90 0 00 Do., spring, bush.. .. .. 0 85 ••130., goose, bush.. .. .. 0 SO Oats•, bush.. .. ........ 0 51 Barley, bush .. .. .... ..0 50 Peas, bush.. .. .. ... 0 77 Iiay timothy, ton.. .. .. 18 00 20 00 Dory mixed. ton ..14 00 15 00 Straw, per ton.. .. ......13 00 0 00 Dressed hogs.. .. .. .. .. 9 25 10 00 Hg , " .. .. .... 0 I8 0 20 Butter, dairy.. .... 0 22 025 Do., copal Cry . 0 25 0 20 Chickens, d'rOssed, lb . .°0 16 0 18 Turkeys; per, lb... .. .. ..0 18 0 21 Apples,'!per bbl... .. 2 00 3 50 0 Potatoes, per bag.. •• .. '.0 35 0 0 Cabbage, per doz... .. • 2 00 Onions, per bag.. .. .... 1'75 Beef, hindquarters- .. ..9 50 11 00 Do., forequarters.. .. .. 6 00 7 50 Do., choice, carcase.. .. 9 008 00 0 50 Do., medium, carcase . • 17 50 1 00 13 00 1lfuttan, per cwt. • • • • 8 0 1.0 50 ' the parlor. Veal, per cwt. Lamb, per cwt. .. 15 00 17 00 j " ZE e believe that d 8es "elf -re -is " is sprees;: Toronto Live Stock Market. uncles eats' mails," rays Mrs Stephe: Btahrer, President of the clubs who is te. Receipts of live stock at the city mar- West Side society loader, "and' that of:- Receipts were 100 ear loade since last Friday, 'ten much damage is done by usslceatir} composed of 1,713 cattle, 1,130 hogs, 183 claws. Our manicuring parlor will keep sheep and lambs, 279 calves and one our pet felines in clean, henithy a - Fair will work out the d ' the appendix, the point sticking out e considerable distance. the head of the Than being in the appendix. The strange feature of the case is that 0 8G Mrs. Altoi Kopp denied that she ever swallowed a pin. One •of the surgeons 0 00 < said that many strange things have nowt " 0 52 found. in the appendix, such as shoe we • - 0 52 ; tons seeds. cherry stones and or3iae- 0 78 Central Baptist: The good that may come to the world from one little coun- try church is beyond our measure. Here in modest surroundings, in an atmos- phere of simple faith, in a place where religion is given prominent considera- tion, a young man receives his molding for a great life. The formation of char- acter and the growth of moral purpose go on in this quiet corner apart from the buster of much church work. The little church itself may die • away, or if it lives it may never be .known afar., but its gift to the cause is•.worth more than endowments of money. What in Yea, Lord, Thy goodness aid Thy grace encouragement to the pastors of these Shall surely follow me, And when I reach Thy glorioue place For aye 1'11 dwell with little flocks! 'Col Greene, of i'ort Seward, Alaska, is demanding the arrest end return of st. Our God who from the realms of dead deserter who escaped to Canada and the The Mighty Shepherd brought pi nishinent of ' a British captain who Will work in us, through Christ, our aided him to escape. Head, What He in Christ first wrought. The Grip of the North. (By A Banker.) The effects of the five hundred million miler, annual journey of the earth, careering through space around the par- ent luminary at the headlong speed of nearly twenty miles in every second of time, vary greatly on different parts of her surface. On the equator there is scarce any change either lir length of day and night, or in the temperature of the atmosphere; at the poles for a time the sun never rises, followed by a simi- lar period when it never sets; and in the temperate zone the violent changes of summer and winter produce an utter transformation; so complete that where Saves in summer all was floral beauty and �. graceful adornment, in winter all this is ruthlessly swept away and a bleak �•e Be 12 0 r " and barren desolation reigns supreme.. In winter, instead of the delicious sura- ° i flit met• breeze, laden with aroma wafted ereeeeteeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee over the sea .from the far off opposite elluloid Stare Easier ironing gives better finish on things starched with Celluloid Starch, the only no - boil cold -water starch that can't stick. You will like it best, once you try it Buy it by name. Any good dealer. Line ° 0 t' fee substances, but, as far as known, this is' the first time that a pin has been foursa, o. t. --- MANICURE FOR PUSS. Cleveland's Select Felines Must Haan Clean Nails, - New York, June 10. -The Herard Its received the following despatch frame Cleveland: The Cleveland Cat Club de- cided last night to establish a maniaaatrx-• ing parlor for their felines. The mem- bers placed the matter he the han& e e Dr. W. C. Fair of Carnegile avenue, S E.. and decided to employ a coatreetee ent veterinary sur ;eon to take charge : horse. 1 dition. Dr. The quality of fat cattle was fair to tails of the plate." goo. Trade was brisk, although some of Only a seleot few eats, these belong hn;' the drovers stated that it was not as to members of the club, will be admin good at noon as early in the morning- ted to the parlor. Prices were about the same as quoted _ e -e„ at the Junction for the same classes of TIGER ON GRAND STAND: cattle. Exporters.-.Pitices 1tnriged, anywjhere from $5.40 to 80, but only 10 cattle were reported at the latter figure. Bulls sold all the way from $4.25 to $4.75. Butchers. -Prime picked lots of butch- ery "sold at $5.50 to $5.65; loads of good $6.25 to $5.50; medium, $5 to $5.25; com- mon and mixed, $4.75 to $4.90; cows at $3.85 to $4.85. Milch Cows. -About 25 milkers and springers sold at $35 to $60 each. Veal Calves -Prices for calves • were ad- vanceMaien r in beef Asympathy prices, selling g from 83.50 to 85 per cwt., and some few were re- ported at $7 per cwt., but this was for an odd new milk fed veneer of choice quality, such as butchers are anxious to get. Sheep and Lambe. -Export sheep, =- clipped, $5.50 to $6; clipped, $5,50; ramp, tee to $4.50; yearlings, $(3 to $7 per cwt.; spring lambs, $3.50 to $6 each, with a few extra choice heavy lambs at $7 per cwt. Hogs. -Mr. 'Harris reports prices un- changed at $7.10 for selects and $6.85 for lights and fats. Winnipeg Wheat Market. Following are the closing quotations on Winnipeg grain futures to -day: Wheat -June 90 1 -Se bid, July 913-8c bid, Oct. 92 3-80 bid. Oats -June 415.8c bid, July 411-2c bid, Oct. 36 1.4e asked. Bradstreet's Trade Review. Montreal - Weather conditions hare during the past w•eelc have not improved to such an extent as to have much hi- fluenee upon general business. Whole- salerr are still shipping goods ordered early in the season. The wholesale gro- cery trade is brisk and heavy shipments of goods are being made, Teaa, sugars and dried fruits continue firm. The movement in all lines of hardware is heavy. Building operations have not been seriously affected by strikes. For all lines of smaller hardware the demand is exceedingly active in all parts of rhe country. For iron and steel and for the heavy metels generally the demand is equally active and prices are firm. Rail - Broke Through First Ten Rows s.$ Panama Bull Fight. New York, <Tune 10. -The Herald bane received the following despatch from, Panama: In a much -advertised tiger and bull fight this afternoon, which was wit- nessed by three thousand persons, the tiger in trying to get away from the bull broke out of the enclosure and made for the grand stand. A. panic was avert -- ed by h fusila.de of shots, which resulta. in the death of the tiger after he got through the first ten rows of seats. The firearm carrying proclivity of the: - people of this country came in good stead, as the killing of the tiger pre- vented a crush that could but have rvv suited in loss of life. A bull fighter in a regular man an& bull fight, which preceded the main. events, was severely gored by the bull. •.o OLD MAN'S SUICIDE. Conrad. Oppertshauser Found Hanging in His Barn. Elmira, June 10.-A Conrad Opper•te- shauser, of Elmira, committed suicide at his home about 8.30 on Monday even- ing He was found in his barn hanggaars from a rafter with the doors bolted inside. He was looked upon as a reliable and industrious citizen, and had reached the age of 83 years. The cause of thee act is unknown. WILL RITY WATERWORKS. Ingersoll Council Decides to Accept Offer of Company. Ingersoll, Ont., Despatch. --At a seasiaett; of the Council, which lasted until 1. this morning, it was decided by a votes 0f 0 to 3 to accept the offer of the Winter Works Company of $95,00 for the purchase of the plant. Public matte int*s will be bold, and the proposition, will be submitted to the ratepayers: