Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 15 May 1890, p. 2

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An English syndicate is arranging for the purchase of the cotton mills under the con- trol of the Dominion Association, and it is reported that Mr. Gault of Montreal, the president, has gone to England to arrange details. On Thursday eveningM. Hector Fabre, Cam- adian Commissionerâ€"General in Paris, France, and Mme. Fabre gave a. brilliant reception to mark the coming marriage of Miss Clara Ward, of Toronto, with Prince de Caruman- Chimay. At the Convocation of McGill University, which was held in the largest hall in Mont- real on the 2nd inst, the Governor-General was given the degree of LL. D. He replied in a. graceful speech. Ald. G. W. Stephens, of Montreal, has declined to run as an independent candidate in the Quebec elections, on the ground that provincial politics are so dominated by poliâ€" tical hacks that an honest man has no chance. The Manitoba and North»Western Rail- way Company have sold their entire land grant, consisting of 9,000,000 acres, to an English syndicate who will establish a land colonization company. They intend divid- ing the land into small homesteads, and will lend the settlers $500 each to enable them to commence operations at once. GREAT BRITAIN. It is said the Queen will visit Edinburgh in August. A London despatch announces that Lord Chief Justice Coleridge is ill. Three are now 300,000 bushels of Ameriâ€" can corn in barges in the Montreal canal basin awaiting transhipment to the steam- ships, 2} larger quantity of that grain than has ever arrived in that city by barges pre- vious to the openingof ocean navigation. Gen. Laurie, M. 1)., has intimatved his in- tention of donating the $600 drawn from the Dominion Treasury as mileage from London to Ottawa. supplemented with an additional contribution of his own, to the establishment of fishermen’s benefit associa- tion for his Shelburne constituents. The fishing schooner Howard Holbrook, seized the other day off the Newfoundland coast for violating the bait regulation, has been confiscated, and her captain fined $500 by the Newfoundland authorities. There is a good export movement in cattle now going on and prices are advancing. Cattle are not very plentiful and dressed meats are getting higher. The English markets are ofl‘ this week. Reports from Prince Edward island state that large numbers of cattle are dying, en- tailing great loss on man farmers. It is supposed that poisoned f0 der is the cause of the havoc amongst the stock. A number of serious charges have been published reflecting upon Mr. Thomas Mc- Greevy, M. P., in connection with the Quebec harbour improvement and the works at the Esquimault graving dock. . Bread has been raised two cents r loaf in Montreal. Flour, which used to e $4.80 per barrel, has gone up a. dollar, and crop reports from the Northwest are very dis- couraging. Delegates from all parts of the Northwest; Territories are to meet; at Medicine Hat On June 3 to discuss questions of interest to the Territories and decide on some line of action. The Japanese Consul at Victoria, B. C., has written the Toronto Board of Trade in reference to the encouragement of trade between his country and Canada. Five hundred and forty-seven heads of families in Quebec province have filled ap- plications for the IOU-acre land grant offered bp the Provincial Government to each family of a. dozen living children. CANADIAN. Mr. Mercier, the Premier of Quebec, is reported to be seriously ill. A cablegram was sent last week to Yoko- hama. by the Mayor of \Vinnipeg, offering the hospitality of the city to the Duke of Connaught on his way to England. Six men have deserted from the Mounted Infantry School at Winnipeg. Halifax butchers have put up the price of beefsteak to 18 cents a pound, and a move- ment is on foot to establish a co-operative association in opposition to them. The Halifax Board of Trade has passed a. resolution sympathising with the people of Newfoundland in their efl'orts to assert their rights against French claims to coast privileges. Mrs. Catherine Matthews died at Strathâ€" roy, Ont., a. few days ago at the great age of 107 years. She was a native of Sligo, Ireland. - Eu ene Rogers, who is wanted in Yar- moutfi, N. S., for larceny, was arrested in Boston on Sunday and is held under the new extradition law. Miss Minnie Fraser, M. D., of Kinston, has been given a. farewell entertainment prior to her departure for India. as a medical missionary. Five students of the Ontario College of Pharmacy have been suspended for offering to pay a. private detective $100 to procure a copy of the examination papers to be used next. month. Canada. had 23 business failures last week against 38 in the previous week. The first ocean steamships this season reached Montreal on Saturday, the Oregon and the Varna. Dr. MacVicar, of the Baptist College, Toronto, has resigned the position of Chan- cellor, but he will retain the Professo rshp of Theology. Strong bakers, and patent flour has gone up another 30 cents a barrel in W’innipeg. A large party of immigrants from Britain and Northern‘ Europe arrived at Winnipeg last week. I'HE WEEK’S NEWS Fifteen thousand trees from Nebraska have arrived for the experimental farm at Indian ngd, N. w. T_. , Thé ‘strike of the cotton weavers at Ham- ilton still continues, no compromise or settle- ment having as yet been made. A mining company to acquire and de- velop mining lands 111 the Thunder Bay Dis- trict has been oxganized in London, Eng- land. In the libel suit brought by Mr. Ashdown against the \Vinnipeg Free Press the jury brought in a verdict for the plaintiff for $500. The Morris and Brandon branch of the Northern Pacific and Manitoba. railway will be completed into Brandon in about a. week. Several Berlin employers have resolved upon abolishing Sunday work in their establishments. ‘ A special despatch from Washington says evidence was given on Saturday before the immigration Committee to the effect that in New England the Canadians have taken the place of Americans, and that at Glouces- ter 75 per cent. of the fishermen are Cana- dians. Premier Crispi, the Italian premier, has resigned on account of an adverse vote in the Italmn Senate. The Chicago Evening Journal says : There is every reason to believe Mr. Villard and the Northern Pacific Railroad Company have acquired control of the Chicago and Great Western railroad and Calumet and Chicago Terminal railroad. A mid on an opium den in Chicago the oth- er night disclosed the fact that lemon rinds are used for smuggling the .drug into .the country. The lemon is opened, the seeds ex» tracted and opium inserted, after which the rind is so adroitly sealed as to escape detec- tiou. Dom Pedro is reported to be in excellent health. A feature of Mayday in Paris was the dis- covery of many Italian agitators among the workmen. The Spanish Senate has approved univer- sal suffrage. George Seckelpepper, resident of the Pennsylv ania. Academy of ine _Arts, and one of Philadelp hia’s best known financiers, 18 dead, aged 82. He left a. fortune estimated at between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000. A negro of Moscow, Idaho, named J oshua Sear, shot his wife the other day, inflicting a serious wound, because she urged him to go to work, and then to make certain that he would not follow her advice he blew out his brains. It is stated from Washington that the McKinley Tariff Bill, if passed, will not likely go yinto force before the beginning of next year, and possibly not till July, 189]. Several Chinamen who endeavored to find their way into the States from Lower Cali- fornia got lost in the desert, and one of them died from privaticm. It is reported that the \Vells Fargo ex- press messenger on a Southern Pacific train was robbed Thursday night of $45,000 at Eagleville, Tex. The first public baptism in Boston for nearly fifty Pyears took place on Sunday, when six women were immersed by the Chriysâ€" tian Ad\ entists. Rev. \Villiam Burns, who preached the funeral sermon of Daniel Webster, died at Jacksonville, 111., last week, aged 74. The Champlain canal opened at Whitehall, N. Y. , on May 1517, and about 35 boats clear: ed at once, 30 of them being ice laden. A snow storm prevailed in Minnesota, Wis- consin and Dakota, on Saturday, and is looked upon there as an augury of good crops. James Sevall, aged 101, and Mrs. Amy Terrence, aged 83, were married at Laurel Forks, West Virginia, on Saturday, The license law in Fall River, Mass., has expired, and dealers on \Vednesday night gave their stock away. Seven hundred masons and bricklayer: and 100 helpers are on strike at New Haven, Conn., for an increase of wages. All the saloons in South Dakota. have closed up in obedience to the prohibitory enactment. The Chicago wheat market was excited on Saturday, and the price of May wheat went up a dollar. The carpenters’ strike at Chicago has been settled at eight hours a. day, 35 cents an hour to August 1, and 37% cents thereafter- Bishop Borgess, of Kalamazoo, Mich. , who was stricken with paralysison Sunday night, April '27, died on Saturday. The remains of the murdered Dr. Cronin were interred at Calvary cemetery, Chicago, last week. Fires are raging in the valuable pine woods near Reidr Lake, Minn. The Chicago'strikers are reported to have gaiged Ebeir demapds. V The Negro settlement in Oklahoma. are sufigriqg sevgrey from want of foo_d. Nearly all the wood carvers in Grand Rapids, Mich. are on strike for nine hours. The Deceased \Vife’s Sister bill, which was passed by the British House of Commons last week, is no stranger in Westminster. It made its first appearance in the House of Lords in 1841, and since then the Commons have on eighty occasions passed resolutions in its favor, only to have them negatived by the Peers. The promoters of the reform can be congratulated at least upon their per- sistence. The authorities of Edinburgh will confer the freedom of that city on 11.8 M. Stanley. Emperor William has informed the Queen of his intention to vialt England, probably in August. Archbishop W'alsh, of Dublin, has made a proposition that the corporation of the City of Dublin and the Chamber of Commerce constitute themselves a. Board of Conciliation to act as arbitrators in trade disputes. Mr.V\Villiam O’Brien will marry Madame Rafllowitch at the end of June, says 5» Lonâ€" don despatch. The tâ€"emperance party in England has deâ€" cided upon opposing the Government bill for the suspension of licenses. Edmond Hammond, the first Baron Ham- mond, is dead. at the age of 88 yerms. For twenty years he was Underâ€"Secretary for Foreign Affairs. \Vith his death the title becomes extinct. In a. collision at Gibraltar the other day between the British steamers Saltwick and Mount Olivet the latter was sunk. She was an iron screw steamer, bound from Iloilo to Montreal. Mr. Parnell’s friends are said to be indi; nant at their leader’s slackness of attem ance in the House of Commons. The London Herald says Portugal accepts without reserve the proposition to submit the Delagoa. question to arbitration. Cardinel Manning says he has the pledges of many Catholic members of Parliament to oppose the Deceased VVife’s Sister bill. Acting on the advice of Archbishop“ alsh the striking Irish railway employes returned to work on Saturday on the company 5 terms The House of Lords Committee on the “sweating” system urges the workers to ‘organise and force better terms from their masters. UNITED STATES. IN GENERAL. The low coiffure rows in fashionable and pop11_la.r favor. T e top knots are com- fné down. Unfortunately for Mr. Allen’s argument it has yet to be demonstrated that the gaining of the ends contemplated by the movement would unsex woman, or destroy any of those fine and beautiful feminine qualities which move the sturdy, manly breast. The assumption is too important to accept upon the ipse dixit of any one man. Should it turn out, however, as Mr. Allen assumes, that to gain the one is to sacrifice the other, the movement is doomed. Being a man Mr. Allen has rightly interpreted the feelings of men when he argues that “they will for the most part continue to choose their wives from the most womanly of their kind. ” “ Ha pily women have still a, vast body of friends eftâ€"friends who will succeed 1n sav- ing womanhood from the ‘advanced’ wo- men who would fain abolish-it; and those friends are, as might naturally have been expected, the men. In spite of all that lady lecturers and anti~feminine old maids can do to unsex their sisters, men will for the most part continue to choose their wivesâ€"the mothers of future womenâ€"from the most womanly of their kind ; and so will aid and abet in handing down to coming generations those fine and beautiful feminine qualities which the recalcitrant mannish women of our age are so anxious to disown in favor of male peculiarities. Sexual selection will here as elsewhere, play its beneficent part, and se- cure the survival of all that is best and noblest in the gains of our race. Men will protect women against the enemies of womanliness in their own sex. The celibate lady lecturer will die unrep» resented; the woman with grace, t,act high emotional endowments, pure womanly gifts, will hand down her exquisite and charming qualitiesto othei women, her likes, after her.” Another antagonist has appeared in the field against the Women’s Rights movement in the person of Mr. Grant Allen, who claims that it is a revolt against Nature, and can never succeed. Bein an ardent and enthusiastic disciple of arwin, he has adopted as one of the articles of his faith, the principle of ‘ ‘ natural selection ” of which so much was made by the distinguished naturalist. Mr. Allen claims that the omni- potence of this principle will serve to pre- serve the resent relation and character of woman. 11 the Forum for May he says 2 Beet Root Sugar in 0ntario. If the hopes of those who have been ex- perimenting with the sugar beet do not prove vain, Ontario 15 likely to soon be inde- pendent of outside plantations for this much-used article of diet. Mr. Drury, Minister of Agriculture, during last season, took steps to ascertain whether the soil and climate of this province were adapted to produce roots of a quality suitable for the manufacture of sugar. For this purpose be caused considerable quantities of seed to be distributed among the farmers throughout the province, especially 1n the sections ad- joining T01 onto and Cobourg. A few pounds were also sent to the Model Farm, Guelph. Owing to the lateness of the season the beets had not time to thoroughly mature; also from absence of information as to some of lthe peculiarities of sugar- -beet cultivation lthe rowers only sought to obtain large‘ ‘ rootsiy keeping the plants at long distances apart, while to produce rich saccharine \ quality close cultivation and thorough cover- ing of the roots are absolutely necessaiy. ‘Notwithstanding these drawbacks the re- sults generally were promising. The yield per acre a\ eraged over twenty tons while 80 per cent. of the roots analyzed showed a percentage of sugar from 14 up to 17. The mm the sugar, however, was not all that could be desired, a circumstance that was attributed to the imperfect maturity of the beets and to defects in cultivation. Better results were obtained at Guelph where the roots were all kept entirely under- ground. Professor James’ analysis showed polariscope reading 18 per cent, 17.10 per cent. sugar; and coâ€"efficient of purity 83.7 per cent. This season it is hoped that with the experience gained by last year’s trial, the results “will be more satisfactory. Should it be found that our climate and soil are suitable for their growth, an impor- tant industry would at once be created. In that case there would be an opening for 40 large factories to work up the produce of about 70,000 acres of beets, yielding about 200, 000, 000 pounds of raw sugar, this being about the avperage quantity imported annually into Canada, for refining purposes. At the price which it is supposed can be paid at the factories for beets the value of the product of one acre of beets will be foui or five times greater than the ave1age amount realised from any kind of grain crop. Grant Allen on Women’s Rights. of the: Italian (Sabinet were present. The Italian provinces are regresented by 20,000 riflemen. The king _red the first five shots. The fact that Italian money is being em- ployed to foment disorder among the work- man in Paris is likely to sow bitterness beâ€" tween the two nations. The international rifle contests were opened in Rome last Sunday. King Hum- bgzrt,» QufaenMargnegrite and all the Inemllgrs A Jew named Solomon is charged in Cal- cutta with swindling the Bank of Bengal out of eleven lacs of rupees. The Emln Relief Committee at Berlin has received a. letter from Dr. Peters, giving an account of the explorer’s movements up to January 13. A St. Petersburg despatch says it is ex- pected Emperor 'illiam’s visit there will extend over three weeks. It ls officially announced in Vienna. that the Emperm s brother, Charles Louis, 13 the hen to the A11st11a11 throne. It is rumoured Emin Pasha has pledged himself to monopolize the whole of the Cen- tml African trade for Germany. The Italian senate by a vote of 100 to 55 approved a. measure to prohibit the clergy from belonging to charitable organizations. The Pope has forwarded an important re- script to the German bishops, inviting them to co-operate in a. united movement of the Church against social disorder in Europe and slavery in Africa. The first trust in Mexico has been formed with a. capital of $5,000,000, and will be de- voted to the beer industry. Prominent Germans of the City of Mexico are among the promoters, and it is proposed to intro- duce beer gardens similar to those in the United States. How dreadful and how drear, In yon dark world of pain, Will Sabbath seasons lost appear, That can not come again ! God of these blissful hours, 0, may we never dare To waste, in worldly thoughts of ours, These sacred days of prayer ! James Edmeston. Tuesdayâ€"Clear Christ’s religion of all false sentiment, false terrors, false promises ; keep it what in Christ it was and is, note. tyrant or magician, not an artifice or a cos- tume, not a recruiting officer or a paroxysm, but health of body and soul, light and joy, the very strength and glory of humanity. Once let it be seen’that the Lord’s messengers are sent to show men that man anywhere is never so much a man aswhen he is a Christ- ian, that genuine Christianity will better- every part and faculty of him, fashioning him into the measure of the stature of man- hood, comprehensive and complete, and that by proclaiming God to be a father it proclaims equality in a human brother- hood under one law of righteousness, With atonement and forgiveness for the penitent ; it taxes our credulity to believe that this is not 'a. gospel for the people. That would be a terrible doctrine of men’s depravitywhich would dare presume that there is nothing in them to leap toward it as the panting hart to the water-brook.â€"Bishop lIuntingdon. VVednesday~ More light! 0 God! Ipray, More light to shine Upon the (larlfiiess of The scholar, withouggood breeding, is a. pedant; thephilosopher, a. cynic, the soldier, a brute, and every man disagreeable.â€" [Chesterfield People are commonly so employed in pointing out faults in those before them as to forget that some behind may at the same time be descanting on their 0wn.â€"â€"[Dilwyn. It is safer to affront some people than to .oblige them; for the better aman deserves; the worse they will speak of him; as if the possessing of open hatred to their bene« factors were an Mgument that they lie under no obligation. â€"[Seneca. There is no dispute managed without pas- sion, and yet there is scarce a dispute worth a passion. â€"[Sherlock. An old courtier, with veracity, good sense and a faithful memory, is an inestimable treasure; he is full of transactions and max- ims; in him one may find the history of the age enriched with a great many curious cir- cumstances, which we never meet with in books; from him we ma. learn rules for our conduct and manners, o the more weight be- cause founded on facts and illustrated by striking examples. â€"[Bruyere. To be happy the passion must be cheerful and guy, not gloomy and melancholy. A propensity to hope and joy is real riches; one to fear and sorrow, real poverty.â€" [Hume. The most censorious are generally the least judicious, who, having nothing to re- commend themselves, will be finding fault with others. No man envies the merit of another who has enough of his ownâ€"[Rule of Life. The man who fights against his own coun- try is never a bermâ€"(Victor Hugo. Sorrow, too, lies near true repentance, even as the broken becomes the contrité" heart; pride has 110 place in its chastened} and subdued mood The soul, weary of struggle and its own'discontent, receives the Divine voice and 1s comforted. Even one’ s ignorance may help him here, in this soft, unresistingattitude, making him more readily therecipient of the Divine wisdom, more liant to the councils of the Spirit of Love. But it was especially unto the poor that the Gospel of the Eternal Word was preach- ed. To such the Voice of God comes nearer, because it ismore willingly and gladly heard The broken heart 18 open; there IS no pride to close the way thereunto. An angel whis- pers in the ear of every slave, and upon him who hath nothing all heaven waits. But the greatest of human sufferings, those which imbitter all life, have been of human infliction. The situation of the great ma- jority of mankind in ancient timesâ€"those of which we have any definite recordâ€"was one of abject wretchedness. Arcadia existed only in the poet’s fancy. In a state of bar- barism men’s wants were few and simple, but their passions were violent, and for the weak there was no security. Every desir- able garden on the earth was a bait to the rapacity of conquest, the arena. of invasion following upon invasion, like the waves of a hungry sea. Civilization, on the other hand, was organized selfishness, and its peace was, for the great body of the people, a. level de- solation. Their lot was one of humiliating drudgery, of depressing, hopeless poverty. In death, the common lot of all, even the rich and the strong have beheld the despml- er of all their vain shows. Against the in» evitable calamities which shatter or dissolve the works of man’s handâ€"earthquake and tempest and floodâ€"no human power has availed. These lessons of nature, who is no respecter of classes or persons, as to the frailty of all human power and possession, have profoundly impressed all hearts. Loss has led to precious gain. The most important of all the conditions afl'ectmg the spiritual development of man- kind has been sorrow. Golden Thoughts For Every Day. Mondayâ€" ' The light of Sabbath eve Is fading fast away ; What pleasing record will it leave To crown the closing day ? Is it a Sabbath Ipent, Fruitless, and vain, and void? Or, have these recious moments lent, Been faithful y employed? This soul of mine; And thisâ€"my earnest plea. Forevermore shall be And heart of love; The rays from Cal vary qugvermore shall be, More light! 0 Christ! the lamb Enthroned above; ' ThAy (afiizmt fa:c_e reveal, SUNDAY READING. More light; from Thee! More light from Thee! The Ofiice of Sorrow. Aphorisms. Lord Salisbury has recently expressed his indebtedness to the work of the electric telegraph in governing England. It is in the fact that all the Chancelleries in Europe are now practically conducted by the ser- vice of the electric tele mph that its greatâ€" est service to the work is expressed. It is one thing to earry news by telegraph, and it is a much higher thin for the premier of England to sit in his 0 ce and by the touch of his hand be put in immediate communica- tion with the leaders who are controlling each separate section of the civilized world. Nothing so much expresses the accelerated movement of things to-day as the fact that the prime minister of a. country can transact in one hour the business which was formerly stretched out over days, or even months, of time before it could be completed. “For ways that are dark” the “heathen Chinee” is justly credited. Reports from Chicago state that a raid on an opium den in that city the other night, disclosed the fact thatlemon rinds are used for smuggling the drug into the country. The lemon is open- ed, the seeds extracted and opium inserted, after which the rind is so adroitly sealed as to escape detecti'm. This is deception re- duced to a science. Still it would hardly be just to his Caucasian brethren to affirm that the Celestial holds a. monopoly of crooked transactions, It is not so very long ago that coffins were used, so it is said, for the illegal introduction of “fire water" into pro- hibited districts of our own country. In our generosity we must not forget the old saw, “Be just before you are generous.” Some feats of Darb the English jumping wonder, are to stanti, on a. brick one foot high and jump over seven chairs, a distance of 12 feet. He jumped against his record at four standing jumps Wei ht the other day, and beat it by a yard. e wouldn’t allow the judges to measure the jump. 1Times deprecates the exaggeration of the symptoms on which that conclusion is based. Taking the returns of the London Clearing House for the thirteen weeks ending on the. 3rd of April, which show an aggregate of paid clearing of £2,159,956,000â€"a decrease of £12,370,000 on that of the same period. in 1889â€"the Times considers it a very small falling ofl', indeed, but still unsatisfactor'y in view of the expectation of an increase from the promised expansion of last autumn. Nevertheless, the whole decrease is account- ed for by the smaller amount cleared on Stock Exchange settling days, and on purely commercial transactions there had even been a small increase. This would seem to indicate that after all, the condition of trade was at least as good as it was during the first three months of 1889. i If the United States government seriously adopts a policy of retaliation against coun- tries regulating their own tarifl“, the natural consequences are well exemplified in the fol- lowing editorial parugraph which appeared in the Cleveland‘Leader: “Pity the poor farmer. His profits mainly depend upon the amount of surplus grain marketed in Europe. The Republican scheme of tariff which directly increases his taxes, bids fair to restrict his cereals to the home market so much eulogized. This means ruin to the agriculturist, even now scarcely able to keep his land out of the sheriff’s clutches. The introduction of the McKinley bill into congress has generated a movement in for- eign commercial circles for common Euro- ean action in the way of retaliation. grobably the first result of the passage of the bill would be the closing of European orts to $33,000,000 worth of corn annually, $42,000,000 of Wheat, $46,000,000 of flour, $23,000,000 of beef, $67,000,000 of pork and $10,000,000 of dairy products. In a11$221,~ 000,000 of the fruits of our farms would be refused in Europe and thrown back upon an overstocked home market, lowering the prices paid to farmers for everything they raise.” ‘Vhile acknowledging that the first three months of the present year have been dis- appointing to men of business, the London Times deprecates the exaggeration of the Ye tempting sweets ! forbear ; Ye dearest idols 2 fall ; My love ye must not share, Jesus shall have it all ; ’Tis bitter pain~’tis cruel smart-â€" But, ah ! thou must consent, my heart !' ~Jane Taylor. Fridayâ€"In spite of discouragements we must never faint or weary &t the mercy~seat. The stalwart faith that works for the very ; object which it covets, and holds on in spite of delays, is the only faith that conquers. Such a. faith creates such a. condition of things that God sees it is wise to grant what, under other conditions, might be denied. The Bible beams and blazes With the record of the triumphs of prayer. They cover the field of Scripture history as flow- ers cover the prairies. The skeptic must, seal his vision or he will see Peter marchin from a rison cell intoa prayer-meeting, an Elijah ooded with the showers he brought from a sky brazen with drought, and a, little platoon of obscure men and women coming down a. stairway in Jerusalem to shake the world with a new religion that never dies.â€" Bishop Huntingdon. Saturdayâ€" More light ! O Triune God ! 0 grant me this ! Fountain of holiness, Thursday~ Come, my fond, fluttering heart I Come, struggle to be free ; Thou and the world must part, However hard it; be : My trembling spirit owns it just, But cleaves yet closer to the dust. Retaliation Both Ways. O , Shall be my home ; Till themâ€"my earnest plea Forevern.ore shall be More light ! More light 1 I cry While here I roam, Till realms of endless light And perfect bliss ;' Thy glory which I see Forevermore shall be Business in England. More light from Thee ! More light from Thee 1 My frozen heart; Thy presence promised me Forevermore shall be More light from thee! More light! 0 Holy Ghost! Thy self impart: Kindle aflame within ~â€" W. Bishop, D. D. ~â€"-W. Bishop, D. D.

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