_ Man Found Unconscious in Hold of Mount Temple. & _A despatch from Montreal says : An unconscious man was found in the hold of the Mount Temple on Tuesday, when the work of unâ€" loading commenced. The boat sailed from Antwerp several days ago, and from all appearances the stowaway had been without food for days. An empty water bottle was all that was found on him. He was removed to the General Hospital, where he is lying in an unconscious condition. When he recovers he will be sent back. Heavy showers and thunderâ€" storms have delayed harvesting in eastern Manitoba. Jprofessional in the public eye but also carry their friends forâ€" noâ€" thing. Clearly, the professional airmanâ€"particularly when the risk to life and limb is considerecdâ€" earns his fee. And if, in the case of exceptionally skillful and notâ€" ed professionals, the fee may go as high as $10,000, it is still well earned. The professional flyer recoups himself by charging passengers for short flights, but the price falls as the novelty wanes. Thero is also the competition of wealthy amaâ€" teurs who not only "blanket‘‘ the lprofessional in the public eye but A large force of auxiliary hands must be employed. The aeroplane is a queen bee that requires the attendance of the whole hive. _ A swarm of mechanicians and helpers must always be on hand. Fifteen or twenty are employed by the most conspicuous acronauts, and their wages amount to a large sum. Add the charges for the transporâ€" tation of the unwieldy appartus, the airman‘s expenses for board and lodging and the by no means negâ€" ligible cost of gasoline. The miniâ€" mum charges in connection with a firstâ€"class meet can scarcely be brought below $500. es, every flight reduces its value and affects its stability. The cost of aviation, in terms of human life, has been widely conâ€" sidered. _ Its cost in dollars and cents has received less attention, but it is considerable. The initial â€"cost of an aeroplane may be anyâ€" where between $1,000 and $5,000. An unlucky accident may make the machine a total loss before it has ‘been two minutes in the air. Even if it survives its earlier experiencâ€" Objections may be raised to cream and the other real foods beâ€" cause prices are ruling so high, but «drugs are not given away. «Upon the whole it strikes us that Dr. Hutchinson‘s remedies are well worth trying, although they may not be within the reach of all. notes and comments The person who writes in this «discouraging strain is Dr. Woods Hutchinson, but his article, which appears in The Delineator, is not purely destructive. Thero are reâ€" medies which receive his hearty endorsement, and weo propose to pass them along. If "there is no known drug that will add in the slightest degree to the strength and vigor of the. human body, no ‘tisâ€" _‘sue builder‘ on earth except food,"‘ Tetus be thankful for this concesâ€" sion. ‘"The only universally reliâ€" able ‘bracer‘ is exercise in the â€"open air and sleeping with your windows open, and the only perâ€" manent tonics to the body are fresh fruit, red meat and green vegeâ€" tables."" Let us agree that “onlyâ€i is enough if the prescription will â€"only act, and take in what comfort we can from the following : A dollar‘s worth of cream conâ€" taims ten times the "‘strength‘‘ of «any dollarâ€"bottle of tonic ever inâ€" vented. Eat plenty of real foods, the best you can raise or buy, and you‘ll.have little need of either meâ€" dicinal foods or patent medicines. A STARVED STOWAWAY. We are a drugâ€"consuming peoâ€" ple, devoted to the use of medicine and interested to the point of exâ€" citement in new remedies for old diseases. It is an interference with â€"one of ‘our chief pleasures, thereâ€" fore, to be told that the most that «can be said for some wonderful compounds is that they. are harmâ€" less, and that specifics which should be a sure cure for divers ailments are not specifics at all, and that they may do positive inâ€" jury. NOTES AND COMMENTS He sent his servantsâ€"A long line of prophets. _ The fruits they deâ€" manded were obedience to the law of life 34. The season of the fruits drew nearâ€"Again and again God looked at seasonable times for a fair reâ€" turn for his investment amoig tho Jewish people. Went into another countryâ€"In this way Jesus indicates the cessaâ€" tion of the old theocratic form of government, in which Jehovah was the only King. Husbandmenâ€"Under the monarâ€" chy these were the kings nd priests; after its collapse, the scribes and priests. They were ap pointed to oversee the interests of the kingdom. A â€" householderâ€"Matthew _ alone refers to God in this way. It is a favorite word with him. The kingâ€" dom of Israel is frequently spoken of in the Old Testament as a vineâ€" yard. The hedge was a fence of any sort, and here may stand for all those _ "individuals, institutions, the whole national economy,"‘ by which God hedged in the life of Israel, to protect and restrain it. It is unnecessary to give a special meaning to the winepress. In the Oriental vineyard, «‘Where the soil was deep, a press was digged in the earth. This, built round with masonry and carefully cemented, received the juice expressed in a wooden structure set on the surâ€" face.‘"" The tower was a substantiâ€" ally built affair, commanded a view of the whole vineyard, and was apâ€" parently the abode of the keeper throughout the summer and auâ€" tumn. | Lesson X. Two Parables of Judgâ€" ment, Mait. 21. 33â€"146. Golden Text, Matt. 21. 43. Verse 33. Another parableâ€"Folâ€" lowing his custom, Matthew gives a group of three closely related parables, of which this is the secâ€" ond, the others being the two sons, and the marriage feast. All drive home the lesson of the fig tree, that the hollow professions of the Jewâ€" ish, rulers must bring upon them severe judgments. This is the only one of the three which is found in all three of the Synoptics. ] 95. Beat . . THE SUNDAY SCHOQOL To some one such moment of spiritual exaltation atones for meon e sc ns CO PONC . YOIrsC!T np. It is a common fallacy to suppose that we will be known in the last assay of life by what we are at certain periods of idealistic exaltaâ€" tion, by the response which wo make in aspiration when certain high thoughts lift their light before Life is the composite and aggreâ€" gate of all its experience and enâ€" deavors. Your real self is just about the average of the sum of all your many levels, the levels of your secret thoughts, whether high or low, of your periods when you let yourself down as well as of those when you seek to tone yourself up. Wo never can be parts of ourâ€" selves. _ The whole personality moves as a unit. \ Yet men are constantly wasting energy in the impossible task of separating the life into unrelated sections; they would divide it into the sacred and the secular, into the physical, mental, and spiritual, inâ€" to the realms of the ideal and the practical, into what one is at the church and what he is at the office or the shop. We forget that we carry the whole of ourselves into EVERYTHING WE DO. In the realm of character there are no partitions or divisions. Here man is not a trinity of persons, a separate body, mind, and soul. Whatever wo may attempt it reâ€" mains that we cannot be pious in spirit, unreligious in mind, and irâ€" religious in body and practical life. It is impossible thus to partition off the personality, for personality is always a unit, and what we are in any level of !iving depends on what we are in all. That is not the same as saying that one is either wholly good or he is not good at all. Religion is such a turning of the whole life in the direction of spiritual ideals that its principle cannot rule in one section of the life and at the same time have no relation to the others. It is the answer of the whole of a life to that which is seen as the highest good. * ‘‘And may your spirit and soul and body be preserved entire withâ€" out blame.‘"‘â€"I. Thess. v. 23. Either a man is rveli'gio‘usiia'yll’the way through or he is not religious at all. & You Cannot Harbor an Unclean Thought and Leave the Life as Sweet as Before. YOUR SECRET THOTEHTS INTERNATIEONAL LESSON SEPT. 4. and the virtues of a godly killed >=. stonedâ€" 42. The stoneâ€"Suddenly changâ€" ing the figure from the vineyard of 41. According to this, Jesus drew forth from the rulers their own conâ€" fession of the righteousness of their condemnation. Mark and Luke reâ€" present Jesus as answering the question himself, while the hearers protest, "God forbid."‘ The words are a threefold prophecy of the doom awaiting Jerusalem, the call of the Gentiles, and the continued fruitfulness of _the _ Christian Church. 39.â€" Cast him forthâ€"Perhaps reâ€" ferring to the fact that Christ was dragged forth from the city before being killed. This is the heirâ€"The rulers did not acknowledge Jesus to be the true Messiah, but it was bec&use, in their greed and obtuseness, they had misread prophecy and so lookâ€" ed for a King of different mold. So it is assumed in the parable that Jesus is the Son, and known to be such, and yet is deliberately killed. 38. The husbandmenâ€"Since. the sons acted just as the fathers beâ€" fore them, the keepers of the vineâ€" yard are represented as the same throughout. They will reverence my son â€" Meaning that this is the treatment of his son that the father ought to expect, though implying no ignorâ€" ance on God‘s part of the humiliaâ€" tion to which his Son was to be subâ€" jected. 37. Afterward he sent . .. his son â€"This was an indirect reply to tho rulers, as to where Jesus obtain»d his authority. It was the author: ity of One sent from the Father, an authority greater than that of the servants by so much as the Son of God is greater than all the proâ€" phets. _ 86. Againâ€"After the terrible warning of the captivity Jehovah sent still other servants, but these were treated shamefully, as were the first. It is strange that the unâ€" usual benefits which these messenâ€" gers of God brought to the nation should have been so lightly regardâ€" ed. But until the death of Malaâ€" chi, when the succession of prophets ceased, and the nation began to mourn for more of their type, each generation failed to appreciato what the Householder: was doing for his vineyard by sending these servants. Hostility to the prophets, among all classes, is written all over the hisâ€" tory of the Jews. This antagonism changed in form and in degree, but there was no letâ€"up, and it increasâ€" ed rather than decreased. Accordâ€" ing to tradition, Isaiah and Jereâ€" miah both met violent deaths. Every act of life, every detail and every phase of being is an opâ€" portunity to live the religious life, the life of living out toward the best, the spiritual and divine. Life moves steadily upward, gains in power and value as in everything we move with the whole of our powâ€" ers, whether in business or pleaâ€" sure, in the path where the divine light shines. You cannot harbor an unclean thought and leave the life as rich and sweet in any part as it was beâ€" fore. Whenever the will yields on any level of the life to the downâ€" ward pull. the whole personality goes with it. But the other‘ side is true, also, to resist a temptation in even the least matter is to enrich and strengthen the life in every way. Like every other great love, the love of the eternal good knows no cotupromises. We cannot say to ourselves, I will love God with my spirit and leave myself free to seek my own ends, to follow selfish deâ€" sires, with my other powers. You cannot let yourself down in the phyâ€" sicai without dragging yourself down in every part of the life. The faith that saves is that deep, high confidence in the ultimate right and good which compels us to turn the whole of ourselves always to that which we know to be true and good.. Such a faith saturates the whole being and cannot be conâ€" tent with any part or fragment of the time, the thought, the powers. Religion then becomes the conseâ€" cration of every faculty to this way of j v Our concern ought to be not as to how far we may count on such pity but as to how truly we may be worthy, by the steadfastness â€"of our endeavor, of such love. It is nobler by far to live up to love and mercy than to lie down on it. Our hope may well be that inâ€" finite affection will regard us with tender pity, will take us up as does a father, loving the child not for what it has done but for what it has sincerely, earnestly sought to do. years of living on levels of dull, unâ€" worthy content. Yet we can never be known for any other than what we really are. . THINKING AND LIVING. HENRY F. COPE. A fifteen hundred pound nugget from the Temiskaming mine in Coâ€" balt will be one of the exhibits at Toronto Exhibition. 3,000 Ounces Reach Ottawa Mint to be Made Into Sovereigns. A despatch from Ottawa says : Another big shipment of Canadian gold was taken in at the Royal Mint last week. It was in bars and was forwarded by the Canadian Bank of Commerce. The weight was 3,â€" 000 ounces, and the value approxiâ€" mately $50,000. â€"It will be convertâ€" ed into sovereigns. a few minutes it was apparently quenched with a few pails of water. The family, except Mr. Fawcett, the keeper of the place, and a couple of boarders, retired to bed. Mr. Fawcett and the men were sitâ€" ting across the street talking for a short time, when flames suddenly burst all over the building, and Mrs. Fawcett with her seven chilâ€" dren and some boarders had a narâ€" row escape from suffocation. _ The old hotel was badly gutted inside, and the inmates lost most of their furniture, but succeeded in saving nearly all their clothing. The Seguin Hotel Burned, but Inâ€" mates Escape. A despatch from Parry Sound say§: Fire broke out on Sunday in the Seguin â€" Hotel, one of the old landmarks of Parry Sound, and in it was safe yet to permit the free moving of dogs from places in the zone of infection. _ Mr. Tinsley says the restrictions may be kept in force for some time yet. Dogs Cannot Be Moved About the Country. A despatch from Toronto says : The Dominion Government is not yet disposed to remove the restricâ€" tions which have been placed on the transportation of dogs from one part of the country to another. Dr. J. G. Rutherford, Dominion Vetâ€" erinary Directorâ€"General, has writâ€" ten to Superintendent Edwin Tinsâ€" ley, of the Ontario Game and Fishâ€" eries Department, that owing to the fact that the Provinces had not all been very careful to enforce the‘ muzzling regulations, the Dominâ€" ion authorities did not feel that. Shippers at St. John are Not Doing Business, s A despatch from St. John, N.B., says: With a bad slump in toe New York lumber market, shipping men here regard the= outlook as blue. Freights have fluctuated considerâ€" ably in the present season, but it has now come to the point where there is nothing offering at all, as shippers decline to ship in the rocky condition of the market. The latest bulletin from New York says the market is ‘"about the same as last week,‘‘" which was about as bad as could be ; that the demand is slow, with prices less, $17 to $23; and. that it is hard to find buyers. Reâ€" garding laths the bulletin says that the receipts are so large that the yards are filled for present wants, and concessions have to be made to induce purchases for fuâ€" ture needs. . The: quotations are $4.10 to $3.50 for best No. 1 spruce slab stock. _ When it is taken into consideration that the spruce lumâ€" ber prices have been ranging from! $27.to $30, and laths from $3.75' to $4.50, some idea of the state of things is had. l 45. It is characteristic of Matthew to single out the Pharisees for conâ€" demnation. 46. Took him for a prophetâ€"The crowds had gone after him as they had after John the Baptist, because they thought at last, after such a long interval, the old order of proâ€" phets had been restored. 44. To the stone of the Psalms is now added the stone of Isa. 8. 14 and that of Dan. 2, 34, 44. He who stumbles at the fact of Christ may be broken to pieces, but the pieces can be put together again ; but, if the final condemnation of Christ the Judge fall upon a man and scatâ€" ter him as dust, there can be no recovery. BIG SHIPMENT OF GOLD. 43. This is not parable, but bald fact. The nation which despises the manifest favors of God shall suffer the humiliation of having them takâ€" en away and given to a people who will appreciate them. Isaizh to the familiar stone which the builders rejected (Psa. 118. 29y, Jesus shows that the repudiation of the stone by the builders is as unâ€" availing as the killing of the heir by the husbandmen. In both cases the object of rejection turns up again to overwhelm the rejecters. "‘The husbandmen destroyed themâ€" selves when they destroyed tho heir ; and the builders heaped conâ€" tempt upon themselves when they contemptuously set aside the stone. They lost the stone for their own edifice, but it received its due honâ€" or in a more noble building" (Plummer.) BLAZE AT PARRY SOUND CANNOT RELAX YET. LUMBER IS DOWN _ Gasoline fire engines with a speed [of sixty miles an hour are recomâ€" mended for the Montreal brigade. ! A report comes from Hamilton of the discovery of silver and lead | near Greensville. _ The reason of the sensation, whicn is decidedly _ uncomfortable while it lasts, is that pressure tor a certain length of time deadens the sensibility of a nerve. When this pressure is suddenly removed (as straightening out of the leg after sitting with it doubled underneath the body) sensibility gradually reâ€" turns to the nerve, and as each nerveâ€"fibre composing the trunk regains its normal condition of sensibility a pricking sensation is felt, and these successive prickings from the successive awakenings of the numerous fibres have not inâ€" aptly been called ‘"pins and needles." "PINSâ€"AND NEEDLES. After being for a long time in a constrained attitude a peculiar numbness and pricking is often felt in ‘the arm, leg or foot. ‘This is caused by some interruption to the circulation and can usually be reâ€" moved by rubbing or exercise. * M you are going to give your baby laboratoryâ€"handled millein the winter, you need not expect it to thrive in the hot weather on the happyâ€"goâ€"lucky, hitâ€"orâ€"miss â€" barn yard fluid that you will find on the average farm. _ Fortunately the Pasteurization of milk is not a difâ€" ficult task; and all mothers who take young children ihto the counâ€" try in the summer will do well to learn the process, and make it part of their daily duty.â€"Youth‘s Comâ€" panion. Clean milk means an. unceasing attention to small details that very few people are capable of. _ It means that the cows must be housâ€" ed decently, that they must be milked by clean people, and that all the receptacles must be serupuâ€" lously cared for. C COUNTRY MILK, It is a wellâ€"recognized fact that every summer a number of babies perish from digestive troubles, in spite of the increasing care that is taken to prevent the tragedy. Much has been done to educate the moâ€" thers in the poorer quarters of our great cities, especially to teach them that if they would keep their baâ€" bies alive and well through the hot spell they must have clean milk. ©seo8ee0e80e8008% 00000 A despatch from Toronto says : A terrible tragedy by an insane man shocked the residents of Robâ€" erb street on Monday at noon, when the alarm was passed that Mr. Gustavy Merkt, who for the past four months had been an inmate of the Queen street west asylum, had come home and murdered his cripâ€" pled wife and then blown his own brains out. Lying in pools of blood, the woman‘s body in a pasâ€" sageway near the kitchen and the man‘s body in the parlor, the two bodies were found by their young daughter, Lottis, on her return home to lunch on Monday. It was her mother‘s body the horâ€" ror stricken girl first saw. "ObD, my God, has father been here!""‘ burst from her lips: Mr. H. K. Olarke, an officer of the G. N. W. A MURDER AND THEN SUICDDE Insane Man Kills His Wife, Then Shoots Himself., 128288008208 08 2%¢0 HEALTHE Cotton on the New York Market reached the highest price on Monâ€" day since the Civilâ€" War. The council of Oxford University has advised that Greck cease to be made a ~ompulsory study at the university. Dr. Crippen and Miss Leneve were formally charged with murder in Bow Street Police Court, Lonâ€" don, on Monday. The Postofice Department will place stampâ€"selling machines in Toâ€" ronto, Montreal, Ottawa and Winâ€" nipeg. The opium habit is said to be spreading among women in Lonâ€" don. Mrs. Sellers, wife of a wellâ€"toâ€"do farmer of Morris, hanged herself to a tree in the orchard. Drowned While Boating on the Saskatchewan. A despatch from Langham, Sask., says: Four Doukhobors, members of a party of seven, who went boatâ€" ing on the Saskatchewan on Sunâ€" day afternoon, were drowned when the boat capsized. Three of the bodies were recovered. All the men belonged to Ceepee, Sask. A Cargo Shipped From Fort Wilâ€" liam on Monday. A despatch from Fort William says: James Richardson & Song hold the record for the shipment of the first cargo of wheat of the crop of 1910. The: sample was Number 1 Northern, and was shipâ€" ped on the steamer Assinibois, which cleared from Fort William Monday evening for Owen Sound. Checkered gauzes in white and black are stylish, the foundation matching one of the checks. India rubber beads are quite new and consist of hollow tubes simuâ€" Iafii_pg dull bugles. The turnback cuffsâ€"French cuffs â€"on lingerie shirts seem to be logâ€" ing favor with men. White linen hats .embroidered with white or gold are among the fancies of the hour. Belts, bags, and shoes are at the height of elegance when matched with the toilet. Clouds of maline. continue to frame fine throats, especially in dance costumes. Green parasols bob by thousands on boardwalks at all of the seashore resorts. The smaller the hat the larger the sigretta or plumage seems to be the rule. Never were separato wraps and touring coats so smart as this seamâ€" son. Many summer parasols _are built upon mission â€" handles of white wood. & Organdies are more modish thar they have been for years. Suitings for fall lean strongly toward the manish effect. Coat sleeves are long and plain and rather close fitting. Velvet and velveteen promise to be extremely popular fabrics. Many of the fancy linen handâ€" bags are fitted with coin purses. Wings are placedâ€" upright on both large and small hats. Brassware in the Egyptian decorâ€" ation is quite new and effective. Brighter tints are predicted for the coming season. Rhinestones appear on everything of the jewelry nature. Veils aro less aggressive than they have been heretofore. Beads are more than ever in style. An examination of the bodics showed that Merkt, who is a man of about sixty, had shot himself clean through the head, holding the revolver at his left cheek. The woman was shot through the left temple, the bullet emerging from her forehead. The weapon, a 38â€" calibre revolver, was still in the man‘s clenched fingers. Four empty shells were in the chambers and one live one. Five other live shells were in his waistcoat pockâ€" ets. One bullet had passed through the parlor window into the garder. telegraph service, who boarded at the house and who had been arousâ€" ed from his sleep by the sound of four pistol shots, came down the stairs at the same moment, and led the way to the parlor, where the body of the murderer lay. Riâ€"tiMrHMAPA#PCOHIAHHHALPERI~G& FOUR DOUKHOBORS LOST. THE FIRST NEW WHEAT. tridâ€"Ptâ€"iAâ€"Pd~# 44 4444 SEEN IN PARIS SHOPS. Fashion Hints. j