fe wid - Ta Fate. of. Labps @Fcials Now Rests | HN Warn Their Peers, . INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 27.--What ' putter, over is 39 be the outcome of the three rolls a months' "dynamite conspiracy' trial. » high: forty labor union officials ave He licity in the Me- 'edéral Judge Albert B. Anderson, Iz instructed the jury and ordered iste etire. The court then adjourned { uhéil 9.30 am. to-day, thus precluding ithe return of the verdicts before that {time should they be found. All the ! verdicts, while separate as. to éach defendant, are to be returned at one and offerinzs L ers bought freely, %c to Ic higher en' it: | | . | "How long will the jury be out?" 24 1 h, Ske ok wes thé question asked as the jurors | filed out. A basis for a belief that | verdicts would not be reached when court opens to-morrow, and that the jurors may require a much longer time was fqund in the courts instruc. tion to "carefully weigh all' the evi- dence in the case." Ht'has required almost twelve weeks fo introduce the evidence. The defendants who await the out come include Frank M. Ryan, presi- dent of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Ironworkers, of which John J. McNamara, the cop- fessed dynamiter, was once secretary; various executive board members of that union; Herbert 8. Hockin, accus< ed as an accomplice of Ortie E. Mc- Manpigal, another confessed dynami- ter; Olav A. Tveitmoe, secretary of the California Building Trades Council; Eugene A. Clancy, Ban Francisco, 'and J. 8. Munsey, Balt Lake City, Utah. The three last named are charg- «ed. with promoting the Los Angeles ex- #plosion. | ' toug No. § do. extra No. 1 feed, Ic; 0c: feed, 38c. Flax--No. 1 N.W.C,, §1.01%4; No, 3 CW Inspections: northern, 8; No. 110; rejected, 7; No. § Oats--No. - extra No. 1 feed, 1: ed. 3; no grade, Ii; Flax--No. 1 N.W.C., MONTREAL, Dec. the cable in Manitoba , but the tone grains was quiet and Eggs 0. aver the cable. Corn--American e. 26~Dry weather In influential in ad- Bry #2 883% 86% 87% 87 22% or i% 35 GRAIN MARKETS. { WINNIPEG, x. good trading in ontiops. today and prices minutes after five o'clock last Sets, Sronser [The spe 4 for hat searce, Export- Tasit, fractionally lower. Flax broke 1%c to 3c. red and seventy cars were In tion. 0. 3 do., Tec: No. 0. 8, Bic; feed, 4: do., 6c; No. 4 do., 8c; No. § ., 49c: feed tough, éc; No. 1 red Oats--No, 2 CW, 38¢: Barley--No. 3, £%0; No. 4, {lo; rejected, 1 $1.02%; No. 2 C.W,, ., 8c. Spring 130; No. 4, 25; feed, 1; smutty, 2; no grade, Alberta red, 2; No. 3 do, 2. 2 CW, 8: No. 3 CW, feed, 3; no grade, 38; mixed grain Barley--No. 3 CW, 18; No. 4 9; reject- eed, 1. 81; No, 3 C.W,, 11; No. 3 C.W., 2; no grade, 1. MONTREAL PRODUCE. 28. --Business over local market for coarse steady. Demand for butter slow. Cheese steady with i 4 Oats--Canadinn 'western, 82%Db £1 RUD 85 87% 87 23 324d 32! 1% His Mu fairl: we children, they could Not 40 80 without. loging their own lives, Mr. and because they were to drive into Ot tawa to take Christmas dinner with Mrs. Curran's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Johnson. They started a fire in the kitchen stove and then went 0 the barn to do the chores and get the horses ready for the drive to the city. The children were left sleeping in their beds. 7 They had been in the stable about fifteen minutes when Mra. Curran came out and saw the house in flames. Without waiting to call her husband she ran to the door and tréed to get in, but already the fire had got such a start that she could pot pass the flames at the door. Mrs. Curran them ran back to eall her husband, and after putting » lad- der to an upper window they both tried to get in to the children that way, but again the flames drove them back. A¢ this time. neighbors. had arrived, and they, too, made attempts to enter the bose without result, | In her first effor} to enter the door of the house, Mrs.: Curran went so far that she badly burned herself. was %¢ ¢o ta %c up. Thy was nin ere firm and Oats Were --No. 1_ northern, 0. 4, Ne. do., 3a; 1.do. Wc; T6%c; No. No. 3 C.W., 28%c; No. 2 feed, ic, 4 do, wheat--No. 1 , 11; No. 3 do., 6; No. 6 1; No. 2 Ting Wheat was of ate cables fon Tong NO ARRESTS YET. Young Men Who Were With Reilly Kept Under Surveillance. BEAVERTON, Ont., Dec. 27.--The inquest into the death of Ernest Reil- business doing ly active. yellow, 68%c to | No. 2, 43c to -- 43%; extra, No. 1 feed, 422 to 43%c: i 100 x | No. 1 local white, 41; No. § local wane, ly of this place, whose body was L ¢ | dog; No, { Jil own) te, to @0; mae. | found nesr a water tank in the rail- i Joe. 80 to The 2 | way yard Christmes morning, will be {Weleswe, on itil Sufiragettes | " Puekwheat No. 3, §9¢ to 60c. opened bere (ode} by Coroner Mo : as Ral az S isterous. | rrp nn eta wasnt Ja touta, Lean of Orillia. Inspector Greer of | 8TOCKPORT CENTRE, N.Y., Dec. ory, 34.70; winter patents, choice, 3.5%; the provincial police, who arrived 27.--The sufiragette army, which is straight roflers, $.% ta #; do, bags here yesterday, believes that he has ,marching to Albany to carry a secret #3 to &2.4. already unearthed facts which may mess to Governor-Elect Bulger, reached here yesterday afternoon al one o'clock after a quick, easy march «of five miles from Hudson. a4 ! The greetings received from the sown folk of Btockport Centre were of Eoher an explosive and startling char | One enthusiastic citizen with- 'out the least warning exploded bis 'shotgih within $2.20. MilHeed--Bran, $21; ° Huay--No. Duiter--CLoicest 30%e; seconds, To to Eggs--Fresh, Be to Potntoes-- Per bag. ca ed 0ats--Barrels, $4.60: bags, 90 Ibs, dlings. $28 to $30; moullle, $30 to $36. per ton, car lots, Cheese--Finest westerns, 13¢ to 13%c; finest easterns, 12%c to 13%ec. crealier) , to fc; No. 2 stock, fic to 2a shorts, $24; mid- $14 to We to 6c; selected, Ko r lots. Te tn $e. reached his home. No arrests have very close range of ea $12.50 to 'pilgrims; tausing every | $1858 Ga. ou tr 2100 tains 5 bey made, bul jose who were with ¢ ip LI: oe mens 58 Se Bund. narrow. a prereia = we pisces 33. "Canada shit gore ran. from a sky Tooket | *LardCompound, terces, 378 Ibs, $9.75; | esterday Beilly's coat, vest and woo 1 pails. 20 loa; net led serious Injuty iwhich wes set off to greet the arriving suffragettes. Tt took some time for "the pilgrims to realize that the pyro-'! technical display was meant 8s 8 | friendly and hearty welcome. | ! the Stockport small boys. 275 Iba. $14.75 pure. wood pails, 20 Tn Sua 1 PY MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN MARKET. MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 26,--Close: Wheat --Dec., 81%c to Since; May, Has Jn, ree: . $10; pure. tierces, Ibs, found, thought that robbery was the object of the crime, if crime if was, as Reilly Some of the marchers were in such oc to 8So; Ne. 1 hard, Mc 5 fine physical trim that they spent the northern, &ie 10 BY%e; No. 3 do, 80%: | was known seldom to have money. rest of the afternoon in coasting down | to SI%e. oC ise Col. Farwell of* Whitby, county i'mearby hills on sleds borrowed from NT ae crown sttorney, will conduot the ex- amination for the crown sat the in- rs. Curran arose early | ! 'The curiously childish the Holl festival, which Is ¢ annually by the maharaja of | fs described by Mrs, Charles in. "A Magician In Many author made the acquaintai famous Hindu ruler during & India and was invited to for the festival. Early ip the morning 1 club, where I found manyt guests, who were taking ceremiony for the first time. provided with a complete ni Hindu garments, and our was superintended by the servants." We had camels, and victorias provided for by Heve that it was to be decids nified occasion. But I wasg mistaken. The fun bad ; Certain formalities had' through before the signal s : The Day of Reckoning. oe day 'of Schon. The. Gong great day hi y 1 Oe er Ts pur, gathering an to the Bride of Christ toe His name. (Acts 15, 14.) Incidentally, a great mass of professors hive asso- cjated themselves with the saints of God, but have never been begotten of the Holy Spirit. In the end of the Age, a separation must place, and the effect will be a general time of trouble. The Harvest of the Jewish Age pio- tured the closing of this Gospel Age. There "wheat" was separated from "chafl." In the Harvest of this Age, 'wheat"" will be se ted {rom tares." The wheat of the Jewish Age, or 'Israelites indeed," were gathered to the garner of Divine favor, by the begetting of the Holy Bpirit. The wheat of this Gospel Age will be gath- 'We took our seats in the of the palace at a long table. loaded with large gilt dishes i different colored balls as' oranges and filled with At a signal the brother of t! ja came to the front of the salaamed to the prince, w! of the balls and threw it the table, striking the of breast. A The ball broke and scAitéle powder over his costume, was a genernl scramble, #8 time than it takes to wri of balls were dying abou colored contents scattered Bi the crowd. Next ba 3 der ) 1 " grew fast and furiops an enormous stream fire engine drenched colored powders bec: gling together, dyed u variegated hues. After this sort of tl for half an honr it @ copsent, and we | Soogtionss yestorday on & march | .Bran--$19 to #1950. quest y. vate Fations of ibe om New York to Washington to car- | our--! patents, H.05 to $0.35; sec- -- we were most nncel Izy a message to President-elect Wil- ond patents, $3.90 to His; first clears. ed into a tank of I ! son, "Gen." Jones admitted that she [= Er 350 A WINNING FIGHT was dyed a deep se {was giving such & trip very serious | DULUTH, Dee: 3%. - : No. body, and it was fully & + |eonsideration. Coe Be ater Be. 1 Fe the color entirely diss The pilgrims rested last night in 8 3 do. 'si%e: July. S%c. nominal; Dec. Telliog of the made in com- | face and hands. {comfortable farm house here, and 3c asked; May, ¥%c. beating the terrible century plague-- josatied eatly in the morning for Vala. A = E MAI KETS i | Consam 7 a ie, fen miles away. TITLE | Notwi di i R ; lation in Canada in the past fow | WASHINGTON, CHICAGO LIVE STOCK. i d that the +" which the of I en Mourned Dead "Sysonby." wean, _ Dec. Shue sed ts National Sepiterium ont are pus' the past few weeks, NEW YORK, Dec. 27.--Frank Piss. | 9.0; Texas &thers, 8 to 80; Ww hilo. piegue7-- {eet service-ailicialy , Dec. 27.--Frank ¥ise- | 5 o;s $57 to $1.00; stockers and feed- g One. | Christmas season, ler. once stable boy to Sysonby, the erg ws and heifers, 1.78 from Buy 'great race horse, is dead. He killed himself in his room yes- terdsy morning. On the wall above' vy. $1.3 his body when they found it was &' [igs #%.25 Fiewre of the racer. On a table near- | y lay a bit of doggerel--the last | thing Fissler had written--bemoaning ' Syeonby's death. There 'Were no letters or else explaining the suicide. cut his throat. #7. $4.25 to $9.30; co .| to_$7.50; calves, pn $1.60 Sheep] 15¢ up. Not $4.20 .hpative, $6.10 fp $8.75; i HH. - had Planning Slav Empire? PARIS, Dec. 27.--According to the "correspondent of The Journal, 'erdingnd ons nate Hogs 7,000. Market Light, " Lr mixed, £0 ¥.70; roug! to $0.10; bulk of 21,000. Market lc to $i25 to $5.50; yearlings, $6 to §7.25; lambs, GLASGOW CATTLE MARKET. GLASGQ! 26. & Batchelor, tle Im) supplies of lrish cat LONDON, Ont., Dec. 27.--Civic bod- 'petitio feandid practice of allowing about fen limes strong. ber of citizens, 5 68; |: ig rR : showed a decrease sales, $1.3 to 1118 over those of seu Joars ea. Jen's this testimony to the work to $5.80; western. going on?» western, $6.46 to ~--Messrs. Watson porters of {his city, Good quality n the Legislatura | tes nominatéd at |i to sign -poiins- anybody else bas 8s many as 3 the feits were half do tho east. A . make of them." Pref pase spurious urrying public. Mos Jews Murdered §i LONDON, Dec. #1 "And now?' "Now that they're | destroyed, in the sense of having their . Bopes and prospects as the Elect wip- | ent life, He had prepared for all, ex- , eept the Elect, an eternity of torture at the handssof fire demons. 9% | we see thu Batan, "world," "the god' is * blinding all except God's Elect--blind- , character and purposes. (2 Corinthians 4 4.) He has taken advantage of | tan, * ered into the Heavenly gatas by the 5 urrection. chaff of the was burned as respects hopes rospects. Similasly sll teres; 'or imation Christians, will be out. *Hg That Sitteth On the Throne." The Pastor said that Messiah will make all things new by ushering in the New Dispensation snd enforcing righteousness by Divine Power. For ng time Bible students were con- fused on this subject. Their thought was that God was reigning over the world; and that, not content with ses- ing suffering and distress in the 5 the prince of of this world, ing them in respect to God's resl ing "as human weakness, and "an angel of light,"~has 'sometimes using ministers of Ch and college presidents as his unwit- ting tools. ; Satan has interwoven with our the- ology what Bt. Paul styles "doctrines of demons." (I. Timothy 4, 1 Many serve him "not ignorant] nowing the Scriptures, nor Power of Jesus declares that He i bind po more until the thousand years': of the Kingdom be "finished." oh Sar | the 1 bi plekte. da cheese 'were made, lard tried out avd | tallow saved. i 3 & Another Optimists: ~~ Tommy- Pop, what is an optimist? Tommy's P'op-- An optimist, my son, is | a man-who is married abd glad of i Philadelphia 'Record. 3 THE UNERRING SUN At is Uncle Sam's Most Reliable Lighthouse Keeper. NEVER FALTERS IN ITS WORK. By the Aid of the Wonderful Sun Valve It Lights the Acetylene Beacons as It Bets at Night and Extinguishes Them as It Rises In the Morning. The sui is the most trustworthy of | lighthouse keepers. The sun or the beat from it lights many hundreds of bencons along our coasts and waters ways evening after evening and ex- tinguishes them punctually every morn- tng. They are guides on land and sea that are never touched by buman hands from owe month's end to another. The way In which the United States gov- érnment, through its lighthouse board, hus utilized the services of the sun and made that great lamp of heaven. a faithful and unerring servant is most fnteresting. The discovery of acetylene gas was the first step toward retiring the lonely keepers of the little lights in faroff places. Modern magic was not slow {8 recognizing the fact that by the ap- plicativh of certain well known scien- tific principles the lighting of the great chains of beatons that girdle the coasts of thi Two seas und the gnif and cover terested In the acetylene lght and its sutotbatieally generating gas buoy until about the year 1006 und did mot adopt ft until 1008 Then the engineers of the lighthouse bLuvard devised some wonderful Improvements, among them the utilizution of the win. 'The self fighting and self extinguish- ing acetylene beucon is a very simple thing. but it depends:almost entirely on the "sun valve," which is one of the most wonderful but lenst complex of the achic ts of d to the Girst place, the source of light for these 'lone beacons is dissolved acetyletie, which ts stored under pres- sure in steel cylinders. One of these 'eylinders can be charged with enough Usually, however, in the case of float- {ng buoys, a six months' supply is all that f8 necessary, as such buoys are overhatled and painted twice a year. Knowing the size of the flame aud its easly to compute how long a cylinderful will last and bow often it will need to be visited. That Is all the care the light will need. The sun valve does | the sum valve depeuds is tbat light waves become transformed in different degrees, according to the nature of the intercepting body. 'Sunlight upon dark surfaces is converted into. heat, and heat produces expansion. This expan- sioti Js_especially perceptible in certain metals, 2 o> In 'a carefully sedled and substantial ly mounted glass jar nearly a foot high and. about one-fourth that in at ameter a thick biuck rod is placed per- pendicufurly through the center. It Is ed by three slenderer rods of mpblack to ake it absorb light to ; Ible sop the Jakes find ever mavigable delicately suggeste dome reward ws" Bie wuair? She pan dog to wach loyalty. och wie fled. ? " Se Not a farthing," was the reply. 'The United States did not become in- But; my lord, you gave £10 a head cles of a pack of fierce $85 to last a small beacon three years. | "4 hourly Copsumption of gus, it is very 0 'copper also and is coated with on the water plants of its habitat. "ia some views the head is surprisingly maniike, though far from beautiful, and mo specimen has ever sat on the rocks and combed its golden bair.~ Harper's. | ELECTION STRATEGY. Incident of an Old Time English Pare ¢ tiamentary Contest. 1% the days before the institution of the "secret ballot, when the candidate with the longest purse usually wou #h élection, a' former Lord Dundonald, who refused to give rites an oppo at the rate In Prague in 1419 the council ber of the bradschin, or town hall, W used as the piace of execution, in the presence of the assembled bles, their invited guests and tl nitaries of the 'city, the 'up wretches were cast from s window eighty feet to the courtyard below. If his crime was an ordinary of fly. tit he was quite determined to wim seat mext time without bribery. he sent the town crier round the n to aunounce that sil who had for him in this first election might répnir to bis agent, from whom they would receive £10. As comparatively few - people had voted for him. this was not a very ex- pensive process. And at the next eleé- tion "Lord 'Dundonald was elected by af enormous majority. After the tf umph geversl people Some te bim and bruised end to his sufferings, succor. fo the minority at the last election, and Abe majority have been counting on pomething handsome on this occasion." "Perhaps 80," sald the clever candl- ate. "My former gift was for. thelr disinterested conduct in not taking my opponent's bribe of £5. For me to pay them mow wanld he to violate my own fnivlest=Pesraon's Weekly. trained for the purpose, of B be flung to wild boars p y raged by being pricked with The last time practiced was just before Years' war, when the imperis} com missioners brought an unwelcome Mies. sage to Prague. and. were piomiptly thrown from the window. 'This pre cipitated the war and abolished custow.--New York Press. a "' Thermometer and Guif Stream. {1nvestigators have observed that the D 1s not ily a sure Miication of the gulf stream; that the strongest current does not necessarily ncide with the highest temperature, warmth' of the water only indk estes its tropical origin, aod it may y , by a cur