VoWRC 35. For mine own sakeâ€"This is one reason for preserving Jerusaâ€" lem, that Jehovah may justify his way with Israel his people .and so preserve his own glory before the mations. in addition, he is willing ‘to do it in order to preserve the glory of the throne of David, his servant. ;M{;‘"(‘;‘Vn‘“glL‘)’;;“ézfé‘;;“‘tg: | Machine Ru.nn.el' Me? Death in Nipâ€" fations. in addition, he is willingl issing Minc. to do it in order to preservye the| A despatch from GCobalt says: glory of the throne of David, his 3 Victor Leino, a Finlander, aged 23, servant. |died one hour after having his 86. The angel ot Jehovah went head smashed by an explosion at fo ‘Sennacherib, while besiegâ€" the Nipissing Mine. Leino, _ who ir , Enibuah, one ouf the unlocated, !wa.s a machine runner, drilled into & ‘oensed citiecs of Judah, got news 3 missed hole. His head was in a of the advance of the forces of Tir. Girect line with the hole, and the bakah, the Egyptian, whom he set fAying rock crushed his skull. 33. Thereforeâ€"Some think that this word definitely unites this secâ€" tion with the "wnereas‘‘ in yverse 21. At any rate, verses 23â€"35 conâ€" tain in emphatic form the substance ‘of the promise of deliverance from the threatened invasion. 30â€"32. The signâ€"By a series of naâ€" tural occurrences, Judah is to be made certain of her deliverance from her trials, according to the prophecy of Isaizah and the eternal purpose of Jehovah. _ This year (70O1) the people must eat what groweth of itself, the seanty crop which springs up from the shaken grain of the previous harvest. Then, with the devastation and waste of war on all sides, they must still another year suffer lack, subsiding upon the bare products which spring from the roots of the corn. But after these two years of suspended operations in the fields they will be able to plant and reap freely, for their enemies will be gone. 98. I know . . . thy going outâ€" Compare Psa. 139. 2. All the actiâ€" vities of the Assyrians are under the closest serutiny of Jehovah. Their raging and arrogancy (29) are not to go by unnoticed. With hook and bridle Jehovah is to drag them back like wild beasts. 26. I have done itâ€"Unconsciously the aggressive Assyrians had been only the instruments in the hand of Jehovah. It was he who, through them, had keen subjecting the forâ€" #tified cities and their inhabitants to sBuch humilis: ons as those indicatâ€" ed in the blastng of the unripened grain (27). e 24â€"25â€"Through _ his messengers the Assyrian has made vain boasts, and these are the blasphemy against Jehovah. _ With swelling pride and extravagant hyperbole he brags of bhis triumphs over all barriers. As a matter of fact no Assyrian army had set foot in Egypt, and Senneâ€" cherib was not to see his dream realized. 92. Whoem hast thou defied !â€" Gennacherib is blind to the sort of being he has beea trifling with, none other than the Holy One. He has exalted his voice in arrogance, and lifted his eyes in pride, not against Israel, but against the livâ€" ing God. § ‘ 99. The virgin .. . hath laughed thee to scornâ€"Isaizah anticipates the retreat of the Assyrian king, and thinks of Jerusalem as intact. In the Old Testament, shaking the head means to act derisively. 21â€"35â€"The prayer «answered in the form of a message from the ï¬eat prophet. This word of the rd has two distinct sections : (1) verses 22â€"29, whicn is essentially a poem â€" taunting Sennacherib beâ€" cause of his pride and declaring his doom. Verses 30‘32 are a sort of postscript, addressed to Hezekigah. (2) The rest of the message foretells the certain deliverance of Jerusaâ€" lem. 23 _ 17. Sennacherib, who hath sent to defy the living Godâ€"See Isaiah 36. 18â€"20. § f 19, 20. The work of men‘s hands & . . Thou art Jehovah, even thou onlyâ€"The two ideas stand in conâ€" trast. . The worthlessness and nothingness of idolatry are often pointed out by such contemptuous references to wood and stone (see Deaut 4. 2s: 28. 30 20. 17; Isa. 2. 20 ; 17. 8; 31. 7). in this extremity of the nation Jehovah is to show that in him alone abides the true power of actual Godhead. 15, 16. Hezekiah prayedâ€"His inâ€" vocation of Jehovah consists, first, of an address to him as the God of Israel, the reference to the cheruâ€" bim signifying no doubt the two figures which were over the ark in the Jewish temple. But Jehovah is also the God of all the kingdoms of the earth, a doctrine of the solitary divinity of Jehovah derived from the fact that he alone has created heaven and earth. _ 17. Sennacherib, who hath sent to defy the living Godâ€"See Isaiah 36. 14. Spread it before Jehovah â€" The act was symbolical, intending to bring to Jehovah‘s attention the haughtiness of the Assyrians. The letter contained the threat of Senâ€" nacherib, to the effect that no naâ€" tion had yet resisted him successâ€" fully. This warning was reinforced by the events which had brought the Assyrian forces through a series of conquests to Jerusalem. It was a time of severe testing. But the King of Judah was no doubt fortiâ€" fied by the assurances of Isaigh. T8E SUNDAY SCHOOL LFESSON Lesson I.â€"Isaiah‘s Prophecy Conâ€" cerning Sennacherib, Isa. 37. 14â€"38. Golden Text, Psa. 46. 1. Verses 14â€"20â€"The prayer of Hezeâ€" kiah in the temple. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, ; JULX 2. Trackman was Killed Riding Along Track. A despatch from North Bay says : J. Turcotte, section foreman at Nipissing Junction, on the C. P. R., was struck and killed by the To:â€" ronto Express, while riding a track velocipede one mile east of North Bay. 27y 2. The dead body of the man was picked up on the T. and N. O. Railway track, half a mile south of Matheson. College Student and Railway Emâ€" ployec Perish. A despatch from Winnipeg says : At Winnipegâ€" Beach on Thursday, Blanchard Jacques, aged 16, a maâ€" triculation student at St. John‘s College, and Jas. Jerron Howard, aged 17, an employee of the Canaâ€" dian Pacific Railway, a stenograâ€" pher to Superintendent MacKay, of the â€"Winnipeg â€" terminals, were drowned while boating. Edgar Grant, a 15â€"yearâ€"old companion and neighbor, was rescued. TRAIN STRUCK VELOCIPEDTE. DRILLED INTO MINXED HOLE. White Star Line Arranges a Comâ€" promise. A despatch from Southampton says: The strike of seamen which seriously inconvenienced. many of the shipping lines, particularly at English ports, was ended when the employees of the White Star Line accepted the terms of the company and returned to work. The other lines had already â€"compromised with the strikers. DOUBLE DROWNING IN WEST. Carnada Has About 100,000, the Same as Last Year. A despatch from Ottawa says : Canada has 100,000 Indians, acâ€" cording to the latest statistics for the fiscal year. This is about the same number as shown by the count last year. % \Dealer Prosccuted for_ Defacing Currency. A despatch from Ottawa says : In the police court on Friday Auâ€" |gust Roeder, arrested by the Doâ€" ‘minion police on a charge of deâ€" facing coins by, stamping them as Coronation souvenirs, was found lguilty and fined. Proprietor of Wild West Show Gored by Steer. A despatch from Montreal says : Realistic to an unexpected extent, the Wild West Show at King Edâ€" ward Park provided a hospital case, the injured being Mr. Hill, one of the proprietors. Springing from his horse on to the back of a steer, Mr. Hill lost his grip and was severely trampled on and prodâ€" ded by the animal before other "‘cowboys‘‘ effected a rescue. He produced letters from the liâ€" cense department of the Toronto police and the Quebec authorities giving him permission to operate the machine in those cities. The magistrate held that, as Roeder was selling the coins, he was ‘"uttering‘‘ them. The case is one of general interâ€" est, as Roeder has been defacing coins in a similar way for years, under the impression that he was not violating the Criminal Code, section 566 of which reads:â€"‘"Anyâ€" one who utters any coin defaced by having stamped thereon any names or words is guilty of an ofâ€" fence, etc." out immediately to confront. His precipitous retreat is now a part of history. The Assyrian army reached the outskirts of Egypt, at a place called Polusium. There the awful calamity befell him as here described, 185,000 soldiers meeting their fate. The instrument of this |disaster was undoubtedly a pestiâ€" {lence, inasmuch as the neighborâ€" hood of Pelusium was noted in anâ€" tiquity for its power of plague. From Egyptian sources, through Herodotus, we find that by night a multitude of field mice ate up the !quivers, bowstrings and shieldâ€" istraps of the Assyrians. This is ‘probably a picturesque way of deâ€" i‘scribing the pestilence, the mouse |being a symbol of sudden destrucâ€" ‘tion. 38. Smote him with the sword â€" See above. This was twenty years aiter his leaving Palestine. In that time he conducted several successâ€" ful campaigns, but never again atâ€" tempted to invade Palestine. He had learned his lesson, that the Lord is God alone. INDIANS NOT INCREASING. SEAMEN‘S STRIKE OVER. T00 MUCH REALISM. COsT HIM A FINE. One morning we found him lying on his back, his legs up in the air and his coat split from head to tail. We watched him. Soon he began to wriggle,â€"this way and that,â€"until at last he had cast off the old coat, and there appeared a bright new Johnnyâ€"the same and yet a differâ€" ent creature. Instead of the old wormâ€"like legs, there were slender new ones, all folded up on his sides ; and most marvyelous of all, there were wings folded up there, too. The new green coat grew darker and thicker as we watched, until finally Johnny was a darkâ€"brown, lifelessâ€"looking creatureâ€"a pupa, we should call him. Just so he has lain all winter, never eating, never even moving. One of these warm spring days Johnny‘s little spirit will awaken ; then he will come out from that brown coat, and. spreading those broad wings, appear before the world, not as Johnny Funnyduffer, but as a beautiful royal mothâ€"King John.â€"Youth‘s Companton. _After a few days, however, Johnny stopped eating, and began We found him one hot day last August, stretched out on a twig of a butternutâ€"tree, his chubby little legs clasped closely about it. We straightway christened him Johnny Funnyduffer, and took him home with us. We made him . a home in a shoeâ€"box, with good soil from the woods for a carpet. Each morning we gave him a breakfast of fresh butternut leaves, which he enjoyed. to show the most curious changes. He grew shorter and shorter, until he measured less than three inches, and his glossy green coat grew pale and dull. I thinkyou would have called him a worm, but he was what scientilic people call a larva. He was a great green creature seven inches loag and as large round as my thumb. Along his back were two rowsâ€"of long brown spines, and his face was all puckered up into curious wrink: les, making him look quite_savage. Ce800e0%000200000 Whose husband, the Duke of Conâ€" naught, comes to Canada in Septemâ€" ber as Governorâ€"General. THE DUCHESS OF CONNAUGHT Young Folks THE ROYAL MOTH. KING GEORGE V. THEIR IMPERIAL MAJESTIES CROWNED JUNE 292, j911 Duluth, _ June_ 27.â€"Closeâ€"Wheat _ on track, No. 1 hard, 98 3â€"8¢; on track and to arrive, No. 1i Northern, 97 3â€"8¢; No. 2 Northern, 94 3â€"8 to 99 3â€"6¢; July, 97 3â€"8¢; Beptember, 94 38 to 95 3â€"8¢. _ e Minneapolis, _ June 27.â€"Wheatâ€"July, 97 1â€"8¢; September, 97 1â€"4c; December, 97 i4¢; No. i hard, 99 5â€"8c; No. 1 Northern, 97.5â€"8 to 99 1â€"8¢; No. 2 Northern, 94 5â€"3 to 97 5â€"8¢; No. 3 wheat, 95 1â€"8 to 9% 1â€"8¢; No. 1 Durum, 86c. Cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, §4 3â€"4c. Oatsâ€"No. 3 white, 53 1â€"2 to 5Me. â€"Ryeâ€" No. 2, 85c. Branâ€"$20.50 to $20.70. Flourâ€" First patents, $4.90 to $5.10; second pat: ents, $4.170 to $4.90; first clears, $5.25 to montreal, June 27.â€"Canadian Western, No. 2 41 34 to 42¢ car lots, ex store; ex: tra, No. 1 feed, 41 to 41 14e; No. 3 C.W., 40 1â€"2 to 40 3â€"4c; No. 2 local white, 40 to 40 1â€"4c; No. 3 local white, 39 1â€"2 to 59 3â€"4¢; No. 4 local white, 38 12 to 39¢. Flourâ€" Manitoba Spring wheat patents, firsts, $5.50; do., seconds, $4.80; Winter whoat patents, $4.60 to $4.75; strong bakers‘, $4.60; straight. rollers, $4.10 to $4.2%5; do., in bags, $1.85 to $2. Rolled oatsâ€"Peéer. batâ€" rel, $4.55; bag of 90 lbs, $2.15. Barley=â€" Feedâ€"Car lots ex atore, 51 to 5%c. Cornâ€" American No. & yellow, 61 to 61 1â€"2¢. Millfeedâ€"Bran, Ontario, $22; Manitoba, $21; middlings, Ontario, $22.50 to $23; shorts, Manitoba, $23; mouille, $25 to $30. Eggsâ€"Eresh, 17 1â€"2 to 18 1â€"2¢. Cheeseâ€" Westerns, 11 3â€"8 to 11 1â€"2¢; easterns, 11 1â€"8 to 11 1â€"4c. Butterâ€"Choicest, 22 to 22 1â€"2¢; seconds, 19 to 19 1â€"2¢. Toronto, June 27 â€"Butchersâ€"$550 to $6 for steers and heifers; cows, $2.75 to $5; bulls, $4.25 to $4.85. Feeders, 803 to 900 lbs, are auoted at $5 to $5.40; stockers and yearlings, $4 up to $5. Milkers and Springersâ€"§40 to $60 each, the. acerago price being about . $48 to #50 each. Veal calvesâ€"$§4 to $7.50 per cwt., with extra quality_selling at $$ per cwt. _Rheep and lambsâ€"Heavyâ€"ewes, §$5. to §5.75;. light ewes, $1 to $5 per _cwt.; rams.~ $2.50 to $5.50; yearlings, $5.50~ to §$6.50; spring lambs, 9 1â€"2â€"to 10 1â€"%e_perâ€" 1b. Hogsâ€" §$7.15 for hogs, f.o.b. cars at country points, and $7.40 ard $7.45 for hogs fed and watered. $3.45; second clears, $2.20 to $2.45 Hamsâ€"Medium to light, 15 1â€"2 to 16 1â€"2%¢; do., heavy, 12 1â€"2 to 13¢; rolls, 11 to 11 1â€"2¢; breakfast bacon, 17 to 18c; backs, 18 to 19¢ per Ib. _ _ Lardâ€"Tierces, 10 140; tubs, 10 1â€"%¢; pails 10. 3â€"44¢. Eggsâ€"Case lots are quoted at 18 to 19¢ per dozen. Cheeseâ€"12 14c for large and at 12 120 for twins. HOG PRODUCTS. Baconâ€"Long, clear, 11 1â€"%¢ g)er lb in case lots. Pork, short cut, $23. Buiterâ€"Dairy prints, 17 to 19¢; inferior, 15 to 166. Creamery quoted at 21 to 236 pevgfllb for rolls, and at 19 to 21c for solids. Toronto, June 27.â€"Tlourâ€"Winter wheat, 90 per cent patents are Steady at $3.35, Montreal freight. Manitoba flours are unchanged, as follows:â€"First patents, $5.10; second patents, $4.60, and strong bakers‘, $4.40, on track, Toronto. Manitoba wheatâ€"The market wa quiet and steady toâ€"day. No. 1 Northern quotâ€" ed at 9%5c, Bay ports; No. 2 at 98c, and No. 5. at 95¢c. Ontario wheatâ€"The market is unchang. ed, with moderate offerings. No. 2 red az%d xyhitemii‘re quoted ontside at 80 to Sic. ho o0 2o t en en eC OOme UARIUC Barleyâ€"The market is dull nominal. Oatsâ€"Trade fair in Ontario grades, with prices firmer at 37 to 37 1â€"2c, outâ€" side, for No. 2, and at 39 to 39 Iâ€"fe, ‘on track, Toronto; No. 2 W.C. oats, 40 1â€"2¢, and No. 3, 39 1â€"2c, Bay ports. Cornâ€"The market is higher; No. 2 Am: erican yellow is quoted at 59 to 59 1â€"2¢, Bay ports. Peasâ€"The market is dull, with prices purely nominal. Ryeâ€"There is none offering, and prices are nominal, Buckwheatâ€"Nothing offering. Branâ€"The market is dull, with Maniâ€" tobas at $21, in bags, Toronto, and shorts $22 to $23, in bags, Toronto. Ontario bran, $21.50, in bags, Toronto. Prices of Cattlc. Grain, â€"Cheeso and QOther Produce at Home and Abroad. PRIGES OF FA REPORTS FROM THE LEADING TRADE CENTRES OFR AlFERICA,. UNITED STATES MARKETS BUSINESS AT MONTREAL DAIRY, MARKET BREADSTUFEFS LIVE STOCK RM PROSULTS with prices Millions of ducks‘ eggs are, durâ€" ing the few weeks of the season, manufactured by the hand labor of coolie women and children into masâ€" ses of pure dried yolk and albuâ€" men, smelling like biscuits. The alâ€" bumen is used in whe photographic industry. the yolk in the Enropean sweset stuff manufacture. On the same bank of the Yangtze are the new cold storage houses and the great tobacco factories of foreign firms, and near by are ore refinerâ€" ies, in which antimony, lead and zinc are prepared for export. In this rapidly increasing export | trade of China, says the Journal of | the American Asatic Association,' the Germans are taking a great| share. Eoth in Hankow and Shangâ€"| hai nearly 75 per cent. of the export | is handled by German firms, which‘ look upon Hankow as the moâ€"t imâ€" po:tant of their branches which sre spread like a net over China. The capacity of the German merchant, | thanks to his> knowledge of the world rmarket and his zeal â€"to disâ€" cover new resources, by which even | unlikely articles of export gradualâ€" | 1y present a luerative side, has giw | en him a lead‘ng position in the Chinese export _ trade. which the more conservyative and less experi=] mentative English and the fï¬ï¬‚el‘i-; ecans. thinkine far more exclusively| cams, thinking far about ‘bi:o‘" thins Lo win â€"exce methods. of the storehouses and packed by means of hydraulic presses for sea transport. Boats bring wood tar from the Upper Yangtze in big round basâ€" kets lined with paper to be refined and remelted in the factories ; they bring astonishing masses of the greasy product of the tallow tree used in Kuropean technical indusâ€" tries, also cotton and beans, gallâ€" nuts, pigs‘ bristles; also skins, which are sun dried in the yards An astonishing impression of the variety and peculiarity of the naâ€" tural ftiches of China is given by | the storehouses and factories of thei Hankow export firms. Whereas| the export of tea, the monopoly of a few large Russian houses, has fori some years remained almost staâ€"| tionary, the value of the export of oil seeds from Hankow, to take one | example of a comparatively unim-;J portant article, rose from 3.8 milâ€"| lion taels in 1907 to 10.5 in 1909 ‘ Some of the Unusual Products That Fill Its Storchouses. Daughter of the Duke of Connaught. PRINCESS PATRICIA OF NAUCGHT GROWTH OF HANKOW. HNowias sim QUEEN VICTORIA MARY. CONâ€" â€" _ These children can never \ pots with: their fellove ioi ~7 ithess hindrances have been r&@moe" ed: Some recent investigar04$ \made by a French physiciau, NOWY \that among wellâ€"nourished children only nnsteen per cent. 1ave phyâ€" si <l do‘ects, whilegameng the poorâ€" fly nourished ove;~>§by per cent. | suffer from these #fettbs. _ â€" _ This questjgn 6f feed met in ma.ny‘/e"fties bo: abroad by tx supplyir stantial luncheon, eithe Some of the children cannot hear well and some cannot see. They do not complain, because they do not know what is the matter. They accept constant rebuke and defeat with the dumb mystification of igâ€" norance. Many of them have never drawn one natural breath since their birth, owing to the presence of enlarged tonsils and adenoids. "Do you think you can mangge with my salary of cight dollars a week, darling ‘‘ he asked, after sho bad sard yesr <«FKM try. Jack,‘‘ reâ€" ied ahe.~ "But what will you do !"‘ The matter is that they are ill. Some of them are hungry, and i6 is as hopeless to expect a child to study well when he needs food as it would be to expect a fire that needs fuel to burn well. The hunâ€" ger may be due to an actual lack of food, or it may be that the teeth are in such poor condition that the child cannot chew, and therefore does not digest. Or it may be that the food offered to it at home is entirely unsuited to its needs. Both in this counity and in Europe investigations of this matâ€" ter have been made with significant results. One fact proved by them is that there is no suoch thing as a "lazy‘‘ child. The normal child is interested, alert, brightâ€"minded, full of waking cumosities about the world into which he has come, and endowed with an almost unquenchâ€" able physical vivacity. What, then, is the matter with the little, inert, stupid, dullâ€"eyed creatures, forâ€" ever at the bottom of the class, who never put a question, or seem to pass a given point!? In many ways the world is growâ€" ing less cruel. For this we must largely thank the sceientific spirit, which is daily recognizing more and more of the affairs of life which belong to its department. It is coming into fashion not to kick the man who is down, but to call a committee to inquire into why he is down, and that leads naturally to helping him up. This new meâ€" thod is to be welcomed most of all, as it bears upon the destinies of little children. The new scientific pedagogics no longer divides children summarily into good and bad, stupid and cleâ€" ver. On the contrary, it takes close cognizance of the wonderful relaâ€" tion between mind and body, stoâ€" mach and brain, and learns thereâ€" by that persons, and above all chilâ€" dren, are much more naturally diâ€" vided into the sick or the well, the hungry or the fed, the weak or the strong. ‘nEautha|} ® $g;a22220%e08008e2ee800 * $082482 2204206000864 n THE LAZY CHILD uestion E)/f feeding is belng ma_ny‘/e"fties both here and )y the supplying of a subâ€" luncheon, either free or at al cost.â€"Youth‘s Companâ€"