ild, run doww--there a. b-lucky if you are not an, at do you think they W want rest and a changes t get either. Pity to spat ' Emulsion of cod-liver d] I rest in itself , "I I... - ll. - 0". "s. ' - "‘2 P,'.h'tua, "'0“ balance. , on [a process which Is ttct app In! for the tone!“ ' HI take (hr brown patch†" hf ynllr hand, it you 'o6. te trvutmem ptrtrutentV. ttmerit permits in the up- It two ruinous, will Qt m * Symes' Beauty Hints. wet In! “LCTION NO, "i%i ts.ertrrkitdAiiau" Hm tt P Mr. er, the "CAN VISITURS L0. and I Ah {mental Life ,ranee Company Main , No For Ti', NO 28 1901. fm 'other tau Columbia an: Inn Tr st )unces IMe ol the :0 I rrCrrle VFW“ tell tue what wit to- “PM U†the back at 1 tan) had tor Ion. m-m to grow won. , dang, at your ear , you will Rretir F3433: or 4514-1 x or. 44am 120 grain: POPS. temedy Iâ€. a FOUR an"; '" ".rramir-r on lerwg focaed II HUsii P'nrdu "r, nu I s-hnlr pa.- n':'- an t app.y g t to the bra" wowniah yellow '4] Let ttt â€I- tit the harrt tor ninutvs. The. r'mnt cotto- tttd lay " our In! pottteh “I . ru.u- water, Odd sei. Morten. a mun-tar with lawn. gradually nzil a complete I‘m-n stir in tho :rmlinnts thor- mixture. IX prucmN un- d'zrm ppm red, ’w rt'peatod '- dark Inn'- r! from three ht. [ammu- "e ulna; IO grail arriherl in Ai er. A. D., Id LEASON. Mary Pom Kerwin! - runs surf“ his. free. [hm] Itvqd l :\ ' Duh J. CHENEY. M h in ltimore l “all 1.ptl'a " “strict. Wood., lll agar. Tulodo. o t you 1 Hi mt " 5mm; meleut " 3.... Qua " win who r and pt 'rutt d in “All you Washington raven-From . p... m of Scripture anal-crud by m readers Dr. Tainan In an About“ .hows the Importance of "on" .0. non in anything we have to do for ourselves or othertu, Text: Equal“. What do you ttnd tn thin when “atence of Solomon’. mom? 1 “a in it a farmer n his front door “amusing the weather. It ll ma time. His tieidtt have been Tttowed and trarrowed. The wheat In in the barn m sacks. ready to be taken the“ aad xgttered. Now is the time to now. But the wind is not favornble. It my blow up a storm before night. and he may get wet if he lam oat for the â€wing; or it may be n long "can, that will wash out the seed from the soil, or there may have been a long drought, and the wind may continue in xi, l “He that oboerv -- ' "all not low." at! the wind to blow dry weather. The parched ilelds may not take In the min. end the birds may pick it up. and the labor as well as the need my be wanted. Bo he gives up the work for that any and goes Into the house and waits to see what it will be on the marrow. On the marrow the wind is still in the wrong direction. and for a whole week and for a month. Did you ever see guch a long spell of bad weather.' The lethargic and overctuttiottn and dila- tory agriculturist allows the season to pass without sowing. and no sowing. ot course, no harvest. That is what Solomon means when he says in his text. "He that observeth the wind shall not sow." As much in our time as in Solo- mori' times than; is abroad a fatal humanly, a disposition to let little things stop us, a ruinous adjournment. We all want to do some good in the world, but how easily we are halted in our endeavors. Perhaps we are soli- citors for some great charity. There is a good man who has large means. and he is accustomed to give liberally to asylums. to hospitals, to reform or- ganisations, to schools. to churches. to communities desolated with ttood or devastated with tlreB. But that good man, like many a good man. is mer- curial in his temperament. He in de- pressed by atmospheric changes. He is always victimlsed by the east wind. For this or that reason you postpone the charitable solicitation. Meanwhile the suffering that you wish to alleviate does its awful work, and the opportu- nity for relief is past. " the wind had been from the west or northwest, you would have entered the philsnthro- pist's counting room and sought the gift, but the wind was blowing from the east or northeast, and you did not make the attempt. and you thoroughly Illustrated my text. "He that observeth the wind shall not sow." There comes a dark Suburb morn- hut. The pastor looks out of the window and sees the clouds [other and then discharge their burdens of rain. Instead of a full church tt will be a handful ot people with wet feet and the dripping umbrella at the doorway or in the end of the pew. The pastor has prepared one of his best sermons. It has cost hhn great march. and he has been much in prayer while preparing it. He puts ehe sermon aside for a clear day and talks platitudes and goes home quite depressed, hut at the some time feel- in: that he has done his duty. He did not realise that in that mall audience there were at least two per- sons who ought to have had better treatment. One of these hearers was s man in a crisis of struggle with evil appetite. A carefully prepared discourse under the divine blessing would have been to him complete vic- tory. The tires ot sin would have been extinguished, and his keen and brilliant mind would have been con- serrated to the gospel ministry, and he would have been a. mighty even- gel, and tens of thousands of souls would have, under the spell of his Christian eloquence. given up sln and started a new life, and throutrhout all the heavens there would have been congratulation and hosanha. and after many ages of eternity had passed there would be celebration among the ransomed of What W†awomplls‘hed one stormy Sundny in a church on earth under. 5 mighty gospel sermon delivered to 15 or 20 people. But the crUU I speak of was not properly met. The man in Btrutrgle with evil habit hen-d that ‘tormy day no word that moved him. He went out in the rain unin- vited and unhelped back to " evil Way and down to his oventhrow. Had it been a. sumhiny Sabbath he would have heard something worth hearing. But the wind blew from the .tormy direction that SlbhOth day. That gospel husbandman noticed it and acted upon its mutation and may discover some day his great mistake. He had a. lack full of the tln- est of the wheat. but he withheld it, and some day he will and. when the Whole story is told, tint he - I Vivid Illustration of the truth of my text, "He that observeth the wind Ihail not new." . A . There was another person in that Btormy Sunday audience that deserved Something better from that pastor than extemporised nothingnesa. It was a mother who was half awakened to a sense of responsibility in regard to her horisehoid. She had begun to questim. herseit as to whether it would not be be':er to introduce into her home I religion that would decide I‘llnlt the destiny of her sons and daughters. Would help her to decide the domestic question which was to her a. solicitude. her home had so far been controlled Otsly by worldly principles. She had dared the riot of the elements that morning and had found her my to church. hoping to hear something that A good. strong sermon under the divine. blessing would hnve led her into the Kingdom of God no “tenure her whole family. The children. whether they became farmers ar mechanics or Dachau or artists or m or lem- 'irp";,7iaiiiiGGi-tttpte. households. would have do. their - - ----. A.) ' lives of usefulness on earth would he" taken thrones in heaven. It would have been a whole runny saved for time and saved tor eternity. But the pastor had adiourned the strong and effective dis- oourIe to a clear Sunday. The mother went home chilled in body, mind and soul and concluded not to trouble her- self or her household about the future and to let to-morrow take care of itself and keep on doing as they had been doing. No God in that home. No relis- lous consolation in time of berenve- ment. No formation of thorough Chris- tian character in the lives of those (rowing up boys and girls. They will so out into the world to meet its vicis- situdes without nny sublime re-ell- forcement of the gospel. What a pity it was that he did not put down the manuscript of his well prepared aer- mon on the Bible if -he preached from notes or pour it out of his soul if he had lodged it there through careful preparation! No. He allowed that op- portunity. which could never return, to pass into eternity unimproved. He observed by the way the rain dashed uwen‘ed by the way the rain dashed “aim the windows of the personage and the windows of the church that the wind was from the east or the northeast, but he did not sow or sowed that which was not .worth sowing. In all departments of life there are those hindered by the wind of pub- lie opinion. It has become an armor- hm in politics and in all great move- ments. "He is waiting to see which way the wind blows." And it is no easy thing to defy public opinion, to be run upon by newspaper-9, to be overhauled in social circles, to be anathematised by those who heretofore were friends and admirers. It requires a. heroism which tew possess. Yet no great reformatory or elevating move- ment has ever been accomplished until some one was willing to dery what the world should think or say or do. But there have been men and women of that kind. They stand all up and down the corridors of history, examples tor us to follow. Communities and churches and na- tions sometimes are thrown into hys- teria. and it requires a man of great equipose to maintain a. right POM- tion. Thirty-one years ago there came a time of bitterness In American Politics, and the impeachment of a president of the United States was de- manded. Two or three patriotic men, at the risk of losing their renatoriai position, stood out against the demand of their political associates and saved the country from that whichaii people of all parties now see would have been a calamity and would have put every subsequent president at the mercy ot his opponents. It only required the waiting of a few months, when time it- self removed all controversy. How many there are who give too much time to watching the weather vane and studying the barometer! Make up your mind what you are going to do and then go ahead and do it. There always will be hindrances. It is a moral disaster 'f you allow prudence to overmaster al' the other graces. The Bible makes mctep. of courage and faith and perseverance than it does of cau- tion. It is not once a year that the great ocean steamers fail to sail at the appointed time because of the storm signals. Let the weather bureau pro- phesy what hurricane or cyclone it may, next Wednesday, next Thursday, next Saturday, the steamers will put out from New York and Philadelphia and Boston harbors and will reach Liv- erpool and Southampton and Glas- gow and Bremen, their arrivals as certain as their embarkation. They cannot afford to consult the wind, nor can you in your life voyage. The grandest and best things ever accomplished have been in the teeth of hostility. Consider the grandest enterprise of the eternities-the sal- vation of a world. Did the Roman empire send up invitations to the heavens inviting the Lord to descend amid vociferatlons of welcome to come and take possession of the most capacious and ornate of the palaces and sail Galilee with richest imperial flotilla and walk over flowers ot Solomon's gardens, which were still in the outskirts of Jerusalem? No. It struck him with insult as soon as " could reach him. Let the camel drivers in the Bethlehem caravansary testify. Bee the vilest hate pursue him to the borders of the Nile! Watch his arraignment as a criminal in the courts! See how they belle his every action, misinterpret his best words, howl at him with worst mobs, wear him out with sleepless nights av: mid mountains.' Bee him hoisted into a martyrdom at which the noonday cowl- ed Itself with midnight shadows and the rocks shook into cataclysm. and the dead started out of their sepuicher. feeling it was no time to sleep when such horrors were being enacted. Just call over the names of the men and women who have done most for our poor old world, and you will call the names of those who had mobs af- ter them. They were shunned by the elite. they were cartooned by the ea.- tirists, they lived on food which you and I would not throw to a kennel. Some ot them died in prison, some of them were burned at the stake. some of them were buried at public expense because of the laws of sanitation. They were hounded through the world and hounded out of it. Now we cross the ocean to see the room in which they were born or died and look up at the monuments which the church of the world has reared to their matohless fidelity and courage. After 100 or 200 or 300 years the world has made up Its mind that instead ot being tlagellated they ought to have been garlam1ed, instead of cave of the mountain for residence they ought to have had be- stowed upon them an Alhambra. Young man. you have planned what you are going to be and do in the world, but you are waiting for circum- stance: to 'become more favorable. You are. like the farmer in the text, ob- aerving the wind. Better start now. Obstacles will help you if you conquer them. Cut your way through. Peter Cooper, the millionaire philanthropist, who will bless all succeeding centuries with the institution he founded. work- G"a,.C,,-forttsar-eadttia GGL in! of no who at now *7“ cet't"r95 and cue to lift their hand. here and there a hand might be lifted. But ask those who had an awful hard time " the tttart to lift their hands, and most of the hands would be lifted. The heroes of church and state were not brought up on confectionery and cake. Mrs of the gospel or medical Dractlttonere or members of the bar or merchants or clusens In various kinds ot business had very poor opportunity st the start because we had It too Olly-ts: too easy. We never emu-e- fisted whet It is to get an education to be made. Cut your my through. H " were proper to do so und you should stand in any board or bank di.. recton. In any bond ot trade. In any lea-intuit. cute or national, and an! all who were brought up in luxury But my subject takes another step. Through medical science and den- tistry that has Improved the world‘s mastication and stronger defense against climatic changes " better understanding ot the laws of health human life has been greatly prolong- ed. But a centenarian is still tk won- der. How many people do you know I. hundred years old? I do not.know one. ' We talk of a century as though it were a very long reach ot time. But what is one century on earth compared with centuries that we are to live somewhere, Bomehow-ten eeh.. turies, a million centuries, a quintil- lion of centuries? We are all deter- mined to get ready for the longer life became our father! or older brother: mud the schoollng. and we did not get the muscle which nothing but hard work can develop. I coumtulue you. 301m: man, It to you life la B strug- Sle. It la out of such Cireumtrtttateeq Gtrd makes heroes, lf they are wllllng we are to live after our exit from things sublunary. We are waiting for more propitious opportunity. We have too much business to attend to now or too much pleasure to allow anything to interfere with its bril- liant progress. We are waiting until the wind blows in the right direction. We are going to sow and sow the very best grain, and we are going to raise an eternal harvest of happiness. We like what you say about heaven, and we are going there, and at the right time we will get ready. But my lungs are sound, my digestion is good, the examining physician of the life insurance company says my heart beats Just the right number of times a minute, and I am cautious about sitting In a draft, and I ob- serve all the laws of hygiene, and my father and mother lived to be very old, and I come trom a. long lived family. Bo we adjourn and postpone until, like the farmer suggested by my text. we allow the seeding to pass, and sudden pneumonia or a reckless bicycle or an unsroverned au- tomobile put us out of life with all its magnificent opportunities of de- ciding might the question of ever- lasting residence. A Spanish proverb says: 'The road of By and By leads to the town of Never." Whether in Y' " life it is a. south wind or a norm wind, a west wind, or an east wind, that Is now blowing, do you not feel like saying: “This whole subject I now decide. Lord God, through thy Son Jesus Christ. my Ba- vior, I am thine forever. I throw myself, reckless of everything else. In- to the fathomless ocean of Thy mer- Cy." "But," says someone in a frivolous and rollicking way, " am not like the farmer you find in your text. I do not watch the wind. What do I care about the weather vane? I am now- ing now." What are you sowing, my brother? Are you sowing evil habits? Are you sowing infidel and atheistic beliefs? Are you sowing hatreds, revenges, discontents. un- clean thoughts or unclean actions? If so, you will raise a big crop-o very big crop. The farmer some- times plants things that do not come up, and he has to plant them over again. But those evil things that you have planted will take root and come up in harvest of disappoint- ment, in harvest ot pain, in harvest of despair, in harvest of fire. Hosea, one of the first of all the writing prophets, although tour of the other prophets are put. before him 'n the canon of Scripture. wrote an as- tounding metaphor that may be quot- ed as descriptive of those who do evil: "They have sown the wind. and they shall reap the whirlwind." Some one has said, "Children may be strangled. but deeds never." There are other persons who truth- fully say: "I am doing the beat I can. The clouds are thick and the wind blows the wrong way, But I am sowing prayers and sowing kind- nesees and sowing helpfulness and sowing hopes ot a. better world " Good tor you, my brother, my sis- ter! What you plant will come up. What you sow will rise into a. har- vest ot the wealth of which you will not know until you go up higher. I hear the rustling of your harvest in the bright fteldtg of heaven. The soft sales of that land, as they pass. bend the full headed grain in. curves ot beauty. It is golden in the light of the sun that never sets. As you pass in you will not have to girdle on the sickle for the reaping, and there will be nothing to remind y0u of weary husbandmen toiling under hot sum- mer sun on earth and lying down un- der the shadow of the tree at noon- tide, so tired were they, so very tired. Caught in Cable and Drawn Through the Tow Chock to Death. A horrible fatality is reported from 81mm. Ste. Mame. John A. Gates. of Westbrook, Ont., who was sailing from Bultulo as second mate ot the steamer Mariska, was the victim. . No, no; your harvest wlll be reaped without any toil of your hands, with.. out any besweatlng ot your brow. Christ in one of His sermons told how your harvest will be gatheved when He said. 'The reaper-s are angels." The steamer was towing the schooner John Smeaton. When pas- sing the Sault Ste. Marie Govern- ment pier, Gates, in throwing on the cable. stepped in the coil of man- senger rope. As it played out with lightning rapidity it pulled his body through the tow chock. whence it tell 30 feet into the water. The body was dragged under water, and when the cable and body were drawn on the schooner lite was extinct. Gates served as a aallor in the Spun- lab-Anode“ war. The body was can: to Mon, Out, tor buried. SAILOR’S HORRIBLE FATE. ',78f,fid,tt8rdi: r5gkiseirst', EM (SUNDAY SCHOOL â€lining of Sin and Rmtemsptioet.-4Nm. & H5 Oommmttarr.--1n our mt lesson We named the oreatWB. The tom- " was founded and the Sabbath manned. and man was placed in the garden ot Eden which. aoeeord- in to God's plan, was to become a city of blendedneee and purity. Our (hot parents were perfect and com- plete, with all the poeasi'biiitietr of manhood before them. Adam and his wife were “the moat. mlendhd mtecb. mean. of the race the world hasevcr 3960: fair as an angel. holy a! a. mph.“ Bat mm the garden of de- light-a the tempter came. How long Adam and Ilia wife may have enjoyed the good things that God had pro- vided before the tempcer appeared we cannot tell; neither do we know from whence he came, or how he came to be; but he came and com- polled man to decide which way he would, go and whom he would serve. "tEtMtgtNr'totea1, masco- nu. u. JULY 14, 1901. L Tie trerpont--"Tttat it was a real serpent is evident from the plain Isnd artless style of the Mswyy t an}; from the many allusions made to it in the New Testament. More sub- tile--"ssrpcota are proverbial tor wisdom Matt, x. 16. But these rep- tiles were at nrt-it, probably, tar sup- ettor in beauty as well as in saga- city to what they are in their pre- sent state.' He said--iiere was in the bosom; of the first pair no prin- ciple ot evil to work upon, and this sodcitatlon to sin came from with- out, as in the analogous case of Jesus Christ, Matt. iv. 3; and as the temp- ter could not assume the human form, there being only Adam and Eve in the world, the agency of an inferior creature had to be em- pLoyed." Unm the woman-lhmutls sin‘iess and holy. she was n. free - liable to be tempted." Hath God tgttld-"Is it true that he hath restricted you in using the fruits of this delightful place? This is not like one so good and kind. Surely there is same mistake.†2. We may cat-Ve resists the nret assault by looking at the large- a The tree--'"I'ite tree ot the knowledge ot good and evil." Gen. ii. 17. It was paced ill the garden as a moral test. The object was not to cause their downIuJ, but to test their integrity. D888 of, her priviiems. A. Shall not surely die-Satan now comes out in his true character as “the father of lies." In this be tacit- ly appeals to the {not of her own im- mortadty, a fact which she may well be supposed to be mane of. ' Mrs. Fayson (reading from letterr-Good gracious, Henry, our cottag- at Deal that we lent to mother has been burnt out. Mother herself only esgaped by"; miracle. _ . . _ _. _ -- -- 5. God doth know-The tempter re- flects upon God, as though He were unwnlling to permit them to enjoy the best things. Opened-And so they were to the tact that they had lost the purity of their moral character. Shall Be as God (ll. vo-The object of the tompter appears to have been to persuade our first parents that they shouid, by eating of this fruit, become wise and powerful as God, and be able to exist forever, indepen- dently of Bim.--clarke. . 6. Good for tood-corresponding to "tne Inst ot the flesh." A delight to the eyes ut, T.)--An appeal to the higher sense ot beauty, "the lust ot the eye." Desired to make one witge--- “The pride or life." See 1. John ii. IB. She was at last completely over- thrown. Unto her husband-Adam uln- ned with his eyes open. Paul says he was not deceived. 1. Tim. ii. 14. _ T. Knew that they were naked- Proving that they were no longer innocent, tor innocence is a stranger to shame. Their eyes were opened, but they saw shame and disgrane. “They were conscious of guilt and unWorthiness in each other's eyes. and in the sight of God." Made them- trelvetr-antetead of turning to God tor forgiveness. they enueavored by their own efforts to cover their sin and shame. - _ _ 8. Heard the vofee-The voice is pro- perly used here, for,†God is an in- finite Spirit. and cannot be confined to any form, so He can have no per- sonal appearqntricttufe.. "They heard the sound of the divine going, such an was usual when God appeared to them and conversed with them." Cool of the dar-The evening the cus- tomary time of worship. HM them. tselveg--"Shnme. remorse. toar- a sense of guilt-ttreunite to which they had hith'rto been strangers. d'sor- dered their minds and led them to shun him whose approach they used to welcome.’ _ _ 9. Where art thoo-This queat‘on proved two things. 1. That man was Inst. 2. That Go? had some to seek. Thus we see man's in and Gal’s annual; "oterfe. H M. 10. I was arrald--B'm makes cow- ards of men. became, ete.-.Adarn'ty reply in full of evashn. Ho confesses not his sin bat only hie tear and shame at his bodily nake‘nnna. The question Just asked had given him opportunity to oonfeu his ain.-gti. cobo. I hid -sit-AdtoN anon Ftfrtroetirnpht Misfortune: never 'eEs.: ONTARIO ARCH a, . TORONTO £113 y l ii Vim; told thoe-trt admitting that he was ntrail and naked ha tut- oonaclgplly acknowledged his sin. mm mg screen him from the eye or God; and he could not stand in ma rescues naked; therefore he frd'l to hide himself. This is what announce Will always: do; it will can" '39." to hide himself trom God. l?. Th3 woman -Bere we trad him actually laying the blame ot lulu fail on the circumstances ln which God had placed him, and thus, lndlrectly.__oll_ (10d lilmpelf. tering tiertL M. Thou art ttttred-It is believ- ed by many that before the Kali the serpent went upright, and had an entirely different form from what he now Ital; others think that his form was the same. but that after the [all “his attitude trename n badge of shame and rppultiivenotrs." From being a modrl of grace and elegance. it has become the type of all that is odious, disgusting and 15. Enmity-This rnmily still ex- Istc; mankind loatiis and dams eVerything of the serpent kind. Thy 'seed-UW" spirits nnl wicked men. Her tteed--An allusion to Christ and his church. Bruise thy 1tend--"The wmnt's poian is lodged in its head: and a bruise on that part is fatal." 'Txyacttirttpr--To talk with Satan is ilkelv to result in yielding to hlsette- ductions. Those who sin generally blame others for thrir actions. rRhertML SiTRVEY.. The some in mm in the garden of Eden. or the beauty of the place and tho happiness ot the pair who inhatr. ited it We may endeavor to form some conception, but the imagination must ever tmil in the effort Man’s Integrity Gsted.-Man Was created "just and right. tgtitrictent to have stood, yet tree to tall." He could not bo otherwise and he man. His highest prerogative, yet capable ot nbueo and fraught with most disas- trous consmnencoa. "The tree of knowlrdge," ete., was represented by thm sumo, terms as things permittod. The trvmpter and the sin. l. Tho mallg‘n'ty of the, tr mpttre. What mun g- nity mast haw inhabited his breast to lead him to outer such a Room and bring wh'kmlness and misery there. 2. The tc‘mpter's nrtfulness. He come 'rirtglr---Picir-Me-Urr. attacks the goodness of God. V. 1. If God were good, if ‘He loved you, nothing would be too good tor you, Ho won†withhold Izoih'ng from you. Here In the origin of vorKoundiru,r litr- arty. and 1teettse. ft. The sin. This re- su'tr‘d from (a) unbvliref. The woman b"lleved the tempter and doubted God: ftCtho lust_ol the eye. The results of sin. 1. Conscious loss of rectitude. This is the soul's garment, enabling it to stand in the. presence of God. Rev. iii. 18. Ono robbed ot his clothing hides in shame, so the soul robbed of right- eousness seeks to hide from God. When the robe is renewed in anim- tion men again rejoice In the pre- sence of God. Isa. ixl. IO; Rev. xix. 8. 2. Slavish tear of God. They sought to hide from God. The promise ot the Deliverer. V. IS. The picture is dark indeed. Man is fallen and is thrust out from the presence ot God, and tho way to Paradise and the tree of life is guarded. But out of the dtsriTtstttrltlrtetr God's promise. The Crowd Jeer While Lady Pole-Cnrew'a Wood Burns. London. July rr--Lsdy Beatrice Poe-Carcw and her miner, Lady U. andâ€. nave been away-.31 £50 com- pensumo-n at Cloumel Quarter See- sions tor tue mahcious burning ol live [imbued acres ol wood at. Cu.- 1ep1u_couatur __'11‘)pcr.u'y. _ While the fire was -being extin, guaned, a proaeas th‘h wok two ways. the attended naghbucs were Jul-.11: an: lnLang, and sue no as- sistance. Three old, the iauiog' pro- pany. pave also bxn pumaeJ. .__ K “seed" ot the woman shall "bruise the head'" ot the serpent. Here commenced the remedial scheme of salvation. The levy for the amount will be made on the township lmm when the hostile demonstrations hil‘H'd. Two milcu cows an] a ha ller have been found twr.h.y mutilated on tlu, lurm ot a man named Donelly. at Duadonaid, North Iowa. The farm- house hue been twice burnt down In two years. The blowing Ilgnl'lcunt rettolution has Just been [nasal by the leloran Branch of the United Irish Leagtc', in the County Bl go: - 7 - "That all the 1r,uswholdrsrs of tho parish, without exception of clue: or erNri, who Ell tll not on this day fort- night, June 30 be enr rlled my mom b"rs of thltt league, be considered el‘glble for tho ‘lorty-hot p .13 molt clue; that a black-lat of thdr mums be pelted up In tom-1. public place. in or'ler that the oth ‘1'8 may know f'r. not? those who are ln need of the ‘ton th' and that we clone our nub garlptlon “It on the above-mentioned MORE IRISH OUTRAGES. iieirisued--Decuved ide. by flat- 51633? F" A“... -ssidiau-s wan-3&2; I... ',1 “ii-:3 tTl','.""'),',,:; ... ... ... - 0721-4 D_trolt,No. 1 wl.Ito 00691-2 .-- D trolt, No. 2 nod... 068 1 2 0681-2 Toledo, ... ... - ... ... 067 1-8 o " " Du1uth,h'rh 1 north. 066 1-2tt0 66 5-8 Duluth, No. 1 hard 069 1-2,th-.--. Ituttt.. No. 1 north - 0635-8 Toronto Dusky Harte“. Butter-The receipts are tair, with local prices Mum. but for et. port the mnebet is weaker. Pound nulls Job at 15 to 17 1.2c; large ram, It to 151-2c: {and to clmlce tub, 14 to 16e; interior, Mt to rat: ureamery. boxes, Itl to 181-2c, and rolls IO to 'ak. banal-g What. lurks“. Following are the closing quota- go,'".. at important wheat centres to- F: - Eli---') market in steady with choice stock sell-m; at It 1-2 to t2e per dozen In case lots. Cracked out. 8 1-2 to Be. clteeoe---Market ("tot and prlcm steady. Full cream. Septmmlnr. Mk; do., new. or1 to 9 Iec. Hide: and Wool Hides. 6 1-2 to T 1.2c ; hi lea, cured, Tr2c; calfskin; No. l, MK; ealt. akins. No. 2. Be, ; demons, dairiee, each GO to 65e; sheepskins. trein, 90.: to 81; pol“. earn 20 to Me: lambskin. each 30 to Me; WWW. rendered. 5 to '51-4e; wool, fleece. 13 to MC. wool, unwashed, neeoo, 8 to 9tt. domodtttm........l..... "post 'to.................., mrtattaeu'oattte plateauâ€... Buteh-'catthr.aotms....... magnum. tair.......... do cow.......,,............ do bulk. .._r....... ...____ Bahama". heavy. porcwu Bulk. oxoort. Huh c. per out... Ira-odors.ihorbkoep......,.,. do. umdium..... _ .. dolwht................... Btoelytrtn00teolte....,.... _ "otr.eturoikGUkeitisii, Much cows. 0.011.. _ .. Sheen. owes per (wt. tto.tmtstur............, docullre..... .. . ' Umbs,sprirur, each“ 1'_perhead...... 'Togtr,etiotee, per cm. 11025.00": fed........ liq-.171". per cm.“ Hop. st. per own... '.yuoerisir.......... Bt-c..........:.............. ttoo to can Hannah. Wheat Markets. The local market drags along with almost no business doing. During the past: week buyers have been vs peclaily difficult to find. and val- ues have lost about 2c on the week. Sellers are not diqmsed to operate at present prices and the market is very quiet. The weather contin- ues very favorable and the crop situation is unchanged. Reports from all parts of the country any that the grain is growing splendid- ly. and there is nothing adverse to say. Home of the wheat is in the shot blade. Grubs are damaging garden tttuw-inner Commercial. June 29th. Foreign Crops Destroyed. Irkutsk cable - With its crops withering under the present wave ot equatorial heat. the great val- ley of the Volga is threatened with widespread famine. The river ha! fallen so low that steamers and barges conveying 1,000,000 poodl (15,873 tone) of freight have ground- ed and cannot get to their destina- tdon until rains swell the stream to its normal level. The rural peasantry is destitute in many districts. Far- mers. landlords and traders are ap- prehendve of serious times. Tho dhe tress is so great that the people are emigrating. Crops Short in Russia. London cable..-, dwpatch from St. Petoaartrurg says the no.» in the Province of Strutoff urn withering and tho gran is tscorched, owing to the prolonged hunt and drouth The price of corn is jumping up and the outlook at Sarntolf and in tin- neighboring Volga distriot in alarm» Ottawa, July 7,.--TMro were 1,958 boxm of cheesr- lxmrdwl on ttto Ot- tawa hoard to-day. mak up of 1,547 white and 411 "aut-od. Tm- buyers comblned on IN', and wlwn the when: reamed that the twp Hutch t1truro was offered, must of llwm Hum out, with about 850 have» unmld. Perth, July G.--'Peartto wighl bun- drod and (arty lnn’un rheum- were brought into Perth ch 10:90 market tor dny,tu1wlnltr~ an i Jun ' makv. All cold. Pricenald.91 8 t. rn"ir'rGG'i,turirsr promises to In .5 severe as the {ammo of n dt-cudo up. Ctteetie Marketa. Winchestn'. July 5.-At the media ot tho Cheese [band to-dar 1; boxes were rveustered, MT white and 213 colored. Tm luigluwt offer WM 90 tor both. -__ - “.4 Pricepnld, n 1 Bt. Iroquobv. July G.--ht Um (‘heeoo Board to-day TOI colored and 101 white (sheen were Mterod. The bid- dlng. darted by Mr. Weir at 91-, wan brisk untll ot-r. wml rvnchmi, at which prion Mr. WMr bought 230 and Mr. Ault 410 boxes. Brut-truth on Trade. Trade at Montreal this week In“ sruncsred tomewhat by tlu- w.u'm weather. The monumnt has been combed largely to tlie nm'eudth' of the mom att. new: trade um ugl- out the country is In a. prosperou- condition an! the manufacturers and jobberu have bt-eu buying $reely In c-xpcctation of a good full but new. .. . __ ...,_. - ““L I". The hot weather has luut a ten- dogtc'y to Cluck hummus in home dee gunmen†of Wholrdillé' trade thi- week at Toronto. anuo-a of “we goods are sunny. Canon good. lune hem steadily harm-[Lug 531 when are be m: mowly rotored to liat prices. Trude at. Hunzlilon matinumy to expand. 'ru" warm we::lhr-r Ins add. I'd to ttw d(-m~nl tor all winner have: and trawl rs an ta ims partr or the country are naming in good orders for the ML trade. The pr...- ll'uuu. Trad" at Vl'toria, Vuttvottver nttrl the Konttnnyn' has unarmed a no- what the In“ ten days. The north- ern trade " brisk and large lots of goods are bang shipped to the uln- Irtq any! up there. b I pity mcn- II); in from uhhrunt ri tt.tural comu tat nun; and tar- ML conditions in the harvest. Vulurh‘t time to be “HI Thu 'dae Crop prr continue t. have teade. Trade at TVtot cxgpana. u w- “.u... ..., _-..' "d to lbw drupnl lor a [law and trawl rs in " or the count†an denim orders for the ral, trade. pane, mow-lug to hpor in from dlu'hrvnt parts ot rl mun-a! commâ€: ty, an mm sud lorthdow goo The Markets in; :11 Islam , gtmda col- w.l maintuln 'd. n pm D the ia Manitoba Lmliton continues to arm werxtht-r Ins add t,ttt tor all winner pl rs an ta in“ partr _ un- 59.“an in good MIA trade. The plun- ng to Imports coming mt our" ot the at mn'ty. are tent-w sthow good bowl the tall alter l good effect. tttr