West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 19 Jul 1906, p. 2

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.“ gnu). humility. We we Jesus tit' ting in the Parlm‘s house and menu this important truth. I. Humility commended - "Sit M down in the highs» room. "it down III the have; we." (n. tr, 10). “Humble Lorna" therefore ulda the mighty nd at God" " Pet. v. a). The comm-ad is clan hut-Na yourself. Take every Opportunity of hu-blilg yourself More "'l?tt, In. “My emt"taeraded. ,“M' . to if "tue. ir. m. "He that kWh in." in] be united” (v.11). It in‘ Itdttt who- Soutot Dru, “cool-l “III; the Man fu- "ici-ii.' w“ M M ---" A- I" we Ju"--Thero is to be a future state, we are all hastening on toward the "mutation. At the time God will toward; those who have done good. for Bin sake. without the hope of any nah i, mum. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS. The ban of this lawn is the crown- In. m, humility. We no Jon. nit.' ‘5... in the Pan-ec- Mm- --4 “-4“- "I. A lesson a our duty to the poor (vs. 12-14). 12. Call not thy friends) - The seeond parable b to the host. "it is a sharp rebuke on account of a fault which in almost always committed in the choice of guests." --aautge. Our Lord certainly does not mean that a na- shall not entertain hie friends, but what He inculcates here is charity to the poor. and what He condemns is those entertainments which are given to the rich. either to flatter them or to procure a similar return. --Chwke, Nor thy rich 'teigttttorsv-He that giveth to the rich shall surely come to want (Prov. xxii. M.) Give to thy friends. but let it be to thy poor friends, not to those who - "r, “in the F h 3. Ca poor- easts to t e r are not lorbidden. He that giveth tome poor lendeth to tho Lord. "What the Saviour here commends to others Re has Bil-self tullilled in the most illustrioual hauler. To the least in the kingdom of of God he has invited the poor. the blind, ete.. in the spiritual sense of the words.” " Shall be trk_-The poor who haveheea fed will bless thee, and so will the Lord. You will he conscious of having acted .ysselfisttlr. Resurrection " the jt"s--Ttsero is to be a “stain state, we are all hat-nin- .- 4------' 11.; one who is proud aiiiGieii, iri. honored above others. shall be nbastd. or ".eye..both by God and man. "_" s ”1-..--. 8. Hidden ...... to a 'reddintr-He speaks at a "marriage feast" (R. V.) because the rules of procedure would he lore carefully insited upon. Sit not dowtr---Ttte prides that apes humility yiolates the spirit of this teaching. There should be genuine self-ubasement. 9. He that tode-The host who has authority to decide the matter. With "nme-. Somer or late. pride uf'. line a fall. Mr. In the lowest room. --The high - was ocupied very briefly: the low. est place In permanent." No shame attaches to the one who takes a low place. Go up higher-The way to rise is to begin low. What Christ command- ed He Himself did. He humbled Himself in His birth, in "is life and in His death. Thou shalt thou have worship - “Have‘ *ory."-R. V. Have reverence. runpeet and honor in the presence of the com- Itll,'; ll. Whosoever exaltoth. etc. -Now allows the great principle illustrated by this parable. “Humility is the passport to promotion in the kingdom of God." n. A pueble on humility (n. T-tty. T. A able-The selfish struggle for 'i.Aleld " they were teking their place- nt the table gave Jesu- I. 09- wttulity to teach n lesson in humility. Chen he 'erhtd--Nothirtg escapes the eyes of the Lord. How they chose out-. To tahe the highest place when it is not our due in public vanity; to ohstinetely refuse it when offered in “other in.. Btnree of tho some vi“. taough private and concealed. Humility takes " much are to avoid the mtentatio- of an ab lected refusal In the open seeking of a ouperior plner.---Clarks. The chief room. --'Hte chief seat-t I. 1he gun“ ru- elined on couches around the table which formed three sides of a hollow square. i, & Fawn into a pit-oem" tn'ieatees the. coupletely by calling attention to the fart that they on the Subbed: day would have mercy on a beast in distress, and should not he on the Sabbath day deliver this glittering man? Reed Matt. xii. 10-13, Luke xiii. “-17. ' Could not answer himrsilent, but not convinced; chutney and spiritual pride eenled their ft,'.'" .g-imt the force of his renou- vu- our Lord's complete public junkie:- _ " the contemplated mincle wu hhwlnl, why did not these great re- ligiou- authorities forbid it.'"-Farrnr. Took him"Tooit hold of him (Luke xx. Stt, I. Tim. vi. 12)."--Vinrertt. Ruled WShowiag the opinion of Jews as to Dalia. on the Sabbath day. 1 Jenn mwering spakHesus knew they were t"1t'",.t and he we: ready to heel them. e we. perfectly fearless. The 1-rers--The teachers of the law who were present. In it lawful. ete.--. They are in a dine-um; as buyers they ought to know, but if they answered in the Miirmativir they would endow Christ and his work. while to answer in the negative would be to show their M of love and lay themselves liable to n ehrge similar to that given in ehopter xiii. l5.-Ahbott. Held their fem-“Liane to condemn; unwilling to eo-de."----)-. "But such silence inn der; but it is equally probable m the III had entered of hi. own ac- med, in hope. that the Saviour would see him and heal him. Before him--Before the eon-3y had taken seats at the tn- Me. Ihupi---A disease m winch the body a so. pan of it is filled with i A aa%iiGii1--Triii" py limb! here by tl - "--'_W_r+. - gnu till. wnue he 'eodeatmd friendship, he had invited Jesus to his table for the purpose of find, hg " wmity to accuse him. -t.... VII-vane (vs. L6.) l. Chief "ng$see--rt had been wanted that “may have tteenduemtter of 'dtPteerFitViriiriitir""i'i',2'i'l him. To at bread-Our Lord had no in. and, when he '1: invited to dine, St ill a rope: for him to go on the SON-ti a. on ny other day. They were I.“ him IR. Ki-Were unli- Wy may him.--Cinrke. Many M that the invitation of the Phari. t? I. a. More.» one, and that while hon-ma. Inn-m Osaka}. Td. my Pen---" had been our; “MAI. 5.0- lo. v, JUL! 8.. no. su- mngr--This, nun my have [It here by the Marina in wet Clgmt and see what he will bless 1m,"}'na":3 You will be conscious of "ytr'eifi.shlr. Resurrection Hatter them or to procure n. “Chub. Nor thy rich that giveth to the rich me to want. (Prov. xxii. True Idea of ’-LIII Mt 1-1; r "'-"_-. WW w lull like those do" I recommended to you the other ta'. t'louro--Boiu4, with a little corned f. like T That his eatate in so small is due to the fact that not long before his death he sold $400,000 of his life insurance- that is. took the cash surrender Vttltte-. and sold his fine estate at Long Branch at a great sacrifice. This he did to ful. ‘fill his pledge to the trustees of the ‘New York Life Insurance 00. that he would personally make good any money of the company which he had paid to Andrew Hamilton and which the latter was unable to account for. Following this promise. he paid over to the com- pany $235,000. About '60,000 of this re- presented the money received for his $400000 of insurance. e The appraiaement shows that Mr. Me- Call left no real estate. The entire per- sonal property amounts to $74,000, from which debts. administration expenses and other disbursements, amounting to 833,165. are deducted, leaving 840,835. New York, July 16. -The Tribune says: The net estate of John A. McCall. former Prerident of the New York Lite Insurance Co,. who died on Feb. 18, am. ounts to only 840.83.5, according to the appraisement filed in the Surrogate ot- rte.t.ptsttras. 7 WAS SOLD TO MAKE UP MONEY PAID TO HAMILTON. Biorbe--Birio, Slobbl! How do you I. the... 4..-- I .------, . - . " -__-- ""J -» ~I-\\- IV] - llisu'l. The explosion aroused the residents for several miles around, and shattered many pane; of glass 3 mile away from the quarry. Chicago, July 10.-iree men were blown to pivot-s, three others fatally m. jured, and several others badly hurt, by an explosion early to-day, which wreck- ed a shanty in the McLaughlin stone quarriw, at Bellwood, a short distuncv worth-west of Chicago. There is evidence that the explosion was the result of a plot on the part of persons at present unknown to the po- lice. The dynamite shed of the quarry which is at a considerable distance from the shanty, which was blown up, “Hui broken open and dynamite carried to the building in which a number of labor. ers were sleeping. and exploded beneath the structure. The survivors all declare that there was no dynamite around than shanty wh.en. they retired for the night. All the" men killed and injured were lreek and Italian laborers. Three Others fatally "mi and 01h- ers Badly Hurt. THREE MEN MEET DEATH. _ --e-__ ".1" - you.” “When he aid that," aid the m. "and as modestly and politely '.",ffPf,'byteqoutoir"ui, life, I looked " him for a. moment, and then wind him by the arm. and aid: ‘Coene with he: than is nothing on my boat too good for you. sir; and I insist that you shall sit with me at my own table at meal hours.” m. Humility complete. "When thou who a dimer or a supper, call not thy friends. . .nor thy rich neighbors. .. all the poor. the maimed, the lame, the blind" In. 12, 13). He who fulfils this injunction is learning the lesson of com- plete humility. What a revolution would come to society if Christ', rules of eti- quette were followed, and the commands of Him who "pake as never man spate, were obeyed by His own. "Rhosoever he be of pm that lomthh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple” (v. ‘ 33). (bimt the cost, then, not of your next party to which you propose to in. vite the rich. great, popular and influen- tial in the church and world, but count the cost of becoming a real disciple of Christ; count the cost of being with Christ attain" a frowning world; count the cost of becoming a fool with Christ and for His sake,-, count the cost of breaking with those who can recompense you in this world. IV. Iramility crowned. “Shah. be bless- ed. . .ehalt be m'eornpestsed" (v. 14). The first beatitmie promises the kingdom of heaven to the poor in spirit, and the third bentitude declares that the meek shall inherit the earth (Matt. v. 3, 5). When Jean” comes. God’s best in heaven and on earth shall be given to those who have followed the Lamb, the meek and ‘i___.le, I lowly Jesus, 'dPtete.,,tshu,tt.rt,tttee. ' min of O Mis. isatrri . stun- ua mid that if ae. Bruce trhvelled by his boat, and put on any sits, there "It” be trouble. Senator Bruce did travel by that boat. And the first oppor- tunity went to the eaptain, and said, Tun-in, I am going ' part of my jour- Ry on your steamboat, and I nut my trip to be as opt-cable to you a it can it; therefore. if you will “sign me that {lace on the boat where my people maul y are located. and give me a place " the table where the colored people get their meals, I shall be much obliged to m TORONTO nu M’CAll’S ESTATE Blown to Pieces by Dynamite Expiosion. Charlestown, s. C.. July 16.--A special to The Evening Post from Walterboro says that J. W. Irnegan, a well-to-do white farmer of Colleton county, today gilled his wife and four children, brain. ing them with an axe at their home, about twenty miles from Walterhom. _ He then went to a. neighbor's house and I told of his deed. Neighbors brought him to Walterboro jail. Imegsn says he kill- ed his “wig, but does not know why. He is s no we of Sweden. Some years ago he tried to cut his throat, and is aid I to be hum. Physicians attended several women who were suffering from hysteria. Wife aad Four Children Buined With Now York, July Io'.--) the lusting of an ammonia pipe which was struck by the trolley pole of a Brighton Beach train passing under the foot bridge connecting the Consumers' Brewery with the Comm. tncrC llotcl in Flatbush, early to-day, the lives of two hundred passengers were imperillrd and when sen-ml were pros- trated by the fumes a panic followed. The motorman, James McCurtlnnd, was unconscious for half an hour through m. haling the fumes, and the engineer of the brewery, Paul Kirsehke, was overcome) when he tried to up)! the flow. l IMPERILLED THE LIVES PASSENGERS. Paris, July Ith-This was the closing day of Parliament, and it was largely devoted to the rehabilitation of Alfred Dreyfus, so that the national holiday to- morrow may witness his return to the army and the official vffaeement oi the stain placed upon his good name. Capt. iDrvyt'uq is to be rained to the rank of l Major of Artillery. and Col. Pieqnart to be Brigadier-General. M. Etienne asked for wpvedy action. adding that it was the _ Government', intention to inscribe Drey- fns’ name on the list of candidates for 1 the cross of the Legion of Honor. This announcement brought out a storm of applause. The bills were referred to the Army Committee, which at once went into session. approved them, and drafted strong. favorable reports, which will be debated later. It is expected that both bills will be. come law before the close of the day. The Radical supporters of Dreyfus are t waking to force the Government to pro- secute the many generals, colonels and high functionarics" responsible for his condemnation. TV Government newspapers say that the affair is clam-d. but others, notably the Echo de Paris and the Figaro, assert that fierce reprimls are about to begin. Will Return to Army To-Morrow Without a Stain. Men -arriving reco;ered thri/J more bodies and this evening the last body was taken from the river. The Klorsey girl gave the alarm and Mrs. Henry Usher, mother of one of the girls, plunged in and pulled three bodies from the water. All attempts at reviving the little girls failed. Cedar Rapids, 1a., July IO.-- Hazel Josephine, Gladys and Lucille Sweating, Clara. Uusher, Ruth Klersey of this city, and Ruth and Cirn Coyle of Sioux ICity, little girls from seven to sixteen Nurs old, were wading in the river three miles above the city to-day in water about two feet deep. Suddenly fLucillc Sweating plunged into the water where it was ten feet deep and went, down. Hazel Sweating attempted to rescue her and in the excitement all but Ruth Klerwy plunged in after them, all drowning. - HONORS FOR CAPT. DREYfUS. Six of Her Playmates Plunge in " ter lier. little Girl Wading in River Gets Be.. yond Her Depth. SAD END or ( SEVEN CHILDREN: “Mrs. Creftield and I talked over the !him matter of killing George. The one that I than had the best chance was to do it. Mrs. did 1 wafield had bought the gun. This " Mi terttoon I thought I would have a better prop Hume to do it than Mrs. Creffieid. as |mitt: my brother wanted to see me. and Mrs. with Creffield gave me the gun. We agreed band. Wo- ARCHiV TORONTO Seattle, Wash., July 16.-EUther Miteh. ell, who shot and killed her brother, George Mitchell, in the Union Station yesterday, made a public stntement hut last sight, in which she describes the murder es deliberately planned. George Mitchell had recently been acquitted of the murder of Franz Edmund themend, a "Holy Roller prophet," on the plea of insanity. He claimed that Creffield had wornged his sister. Esther, who was u "Holy Roller." Esther later planned her brother's death. In her statement she said: AMMONIA fUMES all. MURDERS HER BROTHER AND DECIARES Stir. B GLAD " DID IT, She and the Widow of the Man He Had Murder- ed Planned to Kill Him. KILLED ENTIRE FAMILY, Oh" :00 over the one that it. Mrs. This " tt better Syracuse, l, Y.. July 10.--This after. noon while Mrs. George Dillon was car. ing for her four months old son George, suffering from pneumonia, and whom the physieians said could not live, she accidentally tipped over a blessed candle at the foot of the infant’s cradle. In an instant the lace curtains were ablaze and the room on fire. The mother grab- bed the baby and rushed out of the room. Just as the fire was extinguished the little one breathed his last in his mother's ulna. _ Which Stood Beside a Dying Baby'l Cradle. Robert N. ('ritchell, of Chicago. Ill., an- other of the injured passengers, is not so well an yesterday. His ttmpcrature rose during the night. Salisbury. Eng., July 10.-The bulletin pasted at the Jnfirn ‘ry here this mum- imp, announced 'iiiii'iiit1ii W. St-ntell, of Brooklyn .0119 f the passengers in. jun-d in the railway disaster of July I, wag slowly sinking.” VICTIMS " THE BRITISH RAILROAD ACCIDENT WORSE. AND PRINCE’S FAMOUS STUD 0F HORSES BURNED. New York, ule 10.-A despatch to the Herald from Carlsbad, says that Prince Alexis Orloff, who arrivod there at fl'W days ago to take the cure recour- ed tt tolvgmm from Russia on Wvthws. day night informing him that his famous stud of horsvs had been hurm-d and com- pletely dostroyvd and his estate ruined by pda suntan (Aged Woman Runs Along Track Ahead i of Engine. St. John. N. B.. dewateic As the re- wit of not, herding the warning: fgtri'tt not to walk on tho railway trucks. “Ti. flallagher. nged 7.1. residing at Wost. field, was struck and instantly Him! by the Baston train this morning. Mn. Gal. Iaghor was carrying a basket of P'gts'. when the train pany, around a sharp curve. Hearing the frantic whistling of the engine she started to run along 1he track instead of stepping to one side. and in loss than n minute she was tnmrir ed beneath the whoels and tvrrihly man- gled. Two sons of deeeased are employ- cd by the C. P. It. -- --_-..-- ' Vigorous measures were taken at once to,properly inform the public on this matter and reports received last night from 38 representative points through- nut Manitoba anl Saskatchewan indicate that the market rumor is absurd and de. void of foundninn in fact. The truth is the west in on the verge of harvest. ing the greatest 119d best wheat crop in its history. Harvesting will begin within 30 days. I! RUST REPORT fAle. Winnipeg, quy 10.-It has been known in grain cinles here for some time past that. powerful interests in wheat have formed a bull ring, anxious to kill the crop of 1906 in order that they may unload their heavy holdings of wheat at a long profit. Every scrap of information of an unprofitable nature has been magnified and wired to Min- nenpnlin and Chicago. Yesterday the cli- max was reached when an alarming rev port of the prevalence of rust in an "l most ruinous stage was sent out. The Harvest, Which Will Begin in Thirty Days, Will Be the Greatest and Best in the History of the West. SENT ON TO BY WINNIPEG RING T0 BULL THE MARKET. Mrs. CreHiehl, the widow of the dead prophet, was arrested last night and ad- mitted having entered into a compact with Esther to kill the slayer of her bus- I that it must be done " soon " possible. My brother Fred was up to my room to- day and aid that Berry and George were going to Portland this evening. I went to.the depot and saw Perry get his tiek. et, At last I saw George and I shook hands with him. He and Perry were walking in front, and Fred. and I were walking behind. I was walking to the door and George was in front of me, That was the chance I wanted. and I shot him. My brother Fred. grabbed me and I sat down on his lap and put my arms about his neck. I sat there and the officer came. I intended to follow him to Portaml. if I did not get a chance at him here. I am not sorry I did the shooting. I am glad of it." TIPPED BLESSED CANDLE INJURED DYING. CRUSHED UNDER TRAIN, 10.--This after. Billon was car. old son George, ia, and whom d not live, she Silence marie" times it is merely prisoned on the I Itpguage. In an killed and two heads of clergy in the great mo: demand. for the the reforms previ 'trr. Teheran, Persia, luly J0.-There is a ruvcudeseenee of political unrest among the Musselmans and divinity students, which was noticed earlier in the year and it is exciting great uneasiness In Government circles. The divinity stu- dents broke out in active opposition to the authorities yesterday and forcibly released a. professor who had been Imw I'.t'.o,,'e,,i, on the charge of using sedition“ gamma. " --- -“ - FORCIBLY RELEASED A PROFESSOR CHARGED WITH SEDmott. The steamer immediately anchored off the Admiralty pier to invemigate the extent of the damage she had sustained and it was found to be so great that she was unable to proceed and must be docked for repairs. Dover, Eng,, July 10.--The Hamburg- Ameriean line steamer Deurcehland, which left Hamburg yestetdu.x tor New York, while leaving Dover this morning. collided with the Prince of Wales' pier all twisted her stem. News of the disaster reached El Paso yesterdayina telegram to W. C. Grom'a offices in this city, from the point near. est Ocampo, having telegraph facilities. Was Badly Damaged and Docked for I The GrtweiCompany's offices and eorral were swept away but all its American 'employees' escaped. The company’s loss is estimated at $5,000 Mexican money. The Watterson Company, the only other concern owning extensive interests in the camp, suffered a loss of about $13,. 000, its reduction works and offices being destroyed. I)l1ffSttilAlO STRUCK PIER. Robert Iirooks, General Manager of the W. C. Greene Gold and Silver Co., at ()campo, is in charge and is handling matters satisfactorily. Many others were injured and it is expected some of them will die: All the killed and injured. are Mexicans. The American residents are alleviat- ing the suffering of the wounded and are recovering the bodies of the dead as ralsy.ly as_poeible., El Paso. Tex., July 10.-A chradlsurnt and landslide on July 10, at ()cnmpo (Jesus Maria) Chihuahua, Mexico. des- troyed the city and killed seven or ore persons. Sewral Persons Killed and Many Injured by Them. Fatal Cloudburst and landslide in PERSIAN STUDENTS CITY or OCAMPO SWEPT AWAY. us ot clergy immediately assembled he great mosque Ind issued insistent land. for the immediate granting of reforms previously promised in Janu- Hues. r. I cannot express the terrible snmring I had to endure. A derangement ofthcrcusale organs developed nervous prortratiou and a serious kidney trouble. Tho doctorattcnNi me for a year, In“ I kept getting Wot'r0, until I was unable to do mwthing and I made u my mind I could not live. l funny decides to try Lydia E. Pinklmm‘s Vogvudtlc Com- pound as a last resort, and I am t, ,-day a well wmnun. [cannot praise ittm highly, and I u-ll every Hull-ring woman about my case." Mrs. Emma Sawyer. Conyers, Ga. Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to wr?'.ttett; address 1n confidence, Lynn, For {root read Midis-GE IC. Pink- ham'I 'egetable Compound did ior Mrs. Sawyer. . When a womah is" troubled with pain or weight in loins, backache, frmuent. painful or scalding urination, swelling of limbs or tect, swelling under the eyes, an uneasy, tired feeling in the Ngion of the kidneys or notices a sediment in the urine, she should lose no time in com- mom-in v treatment with Lydia ID. Pink. lum’s 1i'lJ'fl'l','f, Com ouml, um itmay be‘the means of egving ill'. life. __ - - Unlea early and correct treatment is applied the patient seldom survives when once the diiease is [usurp] upon her. We believe Lydia E. Pinkltiun't, Vegetable Compound is the most eit1cient treatment for chronic kidney trohbles ot women, and is the only icine especially prgpgred for this plxygs‘el. _ _ _ _ _ 7 Of all the diseases known, with which the female organism is alluded. kidney disease is the most fatal, and statistics show that this disease ison theincxease among women. TIE BEST ADVICE IS FREE Increasing Among Women. " Sinners BeedlliatBestrair KIDNEY Tmtliti my be "Hen, but name. merely Ill indication of guilt In an affray a LGiiii"iiii two were “wounded. The the cost of labor' on this mum will fver'tge ten cent; per one more than it did B yur up. It in natural: to ex- Peet, thereto“. the prints on tho new rick Isl-on will be we high, “though (thewhnsvgyvnvyonu: “31.“. jun, . MAW. ori m: they will be hi “a Fur., 1,111 hftdL Iurle to benefit much from nmdnreeu: . Stocks of canned salmon in this abun- try are now very light and oomideubld interest is attached to the " caching new pack. Packen' aspen-a 'ltd ya!- ne going to be much hightr than ever before. Materials and! u tin and al- der Inn gong up nppleciablv and th- """"t r“... ...u:.. rapull. um year are going to be much hightr than ever More. Material- such u tin and col- der hue gone up lpplecinbly and the Chinese tax has affected labor in tho ',',e'ttl'y nll along tho coast. It in aid M_‘ -1 I_l,r --- (to move well. The demand for seueon- able wholesale lines in moderately active and the outlook for fall trade in very satisfactory. Collections are fair to good. Ottawa.. There is n fairly ttootrmove- ment to local trade here, while the move. ment in wholesale dry goods is moderate. The demand for herdwnre in Active. London.. Retail trade here and lo the surrounding country is moderately brhk although whole-ale trade hu still a mic? tone. Receipt: of country produce 'ters arm be large Winnipeg: There is a good tone to trade in all departments. Weather con. ditions during the past week have greatly favored the growing crops, and the wheat harvest still promises to be It record. Summer dry goods are active and there has been a big increase in fall orders. Groceries are moving well an! general hardware is meeting with a big movement. Country trade at all points the coast continues active. Vancouver and Victoria: Trade along is satisfactory and collections are fair to good. Hamilton: All lines of trade continue to move well. The demand for “um-L l Toronto:\‘.'liol0mle trade here is show- ing a good movement for this time of the year. Summer dry goods lines are nuns ing better, and the fall trade promises to be one of the lieavievt in years. Tlie is an exceedingly heavy demand being shown for light dress sultings. Canons. linens and woollen. hold very firm with Mocks in some linm light. Groceries are fairly active. Sugars are firm in tone, as, also canned goods. Stocks of peas, corn and tomatoes are light. Salmon is firm and growing Pearce. The demand for building materials and general hard- ware is as active as ever. Country made is allowing 1 fairly good tone. ther. resultschnve not been very disus- trous. except in the cases of n compara- tively few mm" businesses and general cond.tions throughout the counry look so prosperous that expectation» furor great activity in all lines for the buth of bu. year. cuuulitions Gt the crops througnou all parts of Canada are encouraging me:- chants to prcpnrse for a. good businm. While it is true that the goods of but liiriter and the spring were slow In moving owing to the uttsetusottalrte wea- Btuwberrleo. qt. boxes .... .. 0 10 to 012 _ Raspberries .. ..... .......... 015 to on Cherries, basket .. .. .. .... 075 to 125 Gooneberries, basket .. .. .... 0 a to 1 to {Wale-melons .. .. .. .. .... 035 to 040 , Toronto Junction, July $.-Reeetpts ot live stock " the Union Stock Yards to-dar well: 90 can. consisting ot 1.870 cattle. in sheep, 7 calves. The quality of tat catile VII fair. Trade val slow. Export prices ranged front $4.60 to 85.15: the bulk nailing " 84.75 to $4.83: export bulll sold " 83.50 to ".rr, but- chers' prices tor picked lots ot choice ranged from $4.70 to $4.80; good trom $4.40 to “In; medium $4.00 to 84.30: common $8.60 to $3.80: butcher cow. $2.50 to $3.MP, veal olives Bold " Ki.00 to $6.50 per 100 lbs.; milk cows amt I ”ringers at 8410 to Kdt; sheep and lamhl. ex- port ewe: from t4.00 to "AT; bucks $3.50 to- ".75: yearling lnmbl 84.50 to M.00; spring lambs at 84.50 to $5.00: hogs. Ielorin ION at $7.60: light £7.35: rows $4.50 to 85.00: In“ [82.30 to K.30 per itt0 lbs. Fed and watered. ( At the Winnipeg option market to-day tin following were the closing wheat quotations', July 'r85ke bid, Aug. Me bid, Oct. tPic bid. Bradstreet'. Trade Review. Montreal: The actual movement of uhulosale trade here continues a little quiet in most liner, although the warm “(author has given a much better tone to the mmoment of retail trade thrirughout the country. Light dry goods are moving well and there is a good bwinuu in all departments of the tall trade. In this connection the out- look is very hopeful, and the excellent New York Detroit ... . M. Lou" .. aneapolls Toledo ... . Duluth ... London.-CattU one quoted " me to tTe per Ib,; refrigerator bet, So to use per 1b.: cheep. (ix-cued. 1316e to 16c per lb. Toronto Fruit Market. _ Do., creamery ... ... Chickens. lb. ... ... .4 Chickens. spring ... Hens, per m. ... ... Turkeye. per m. ... .. Potatoes per his .. Beet, hindqumere ... Do.. tor-equation ... Do., choice. are.” Do., medium, menu Mutton. per cwt. ... .. Veal. per cwt. ... ... Lamb, per cm. ... ... th In moderate supply, with .13; ot 20 loud: " $12 to 814.50 a ma toy timothy And a $10 to $11 tor mixed. Straw firm, three load. selling at no to m . won. Dreued hon are unchanged, with tight quoted at 310.50 to 810.65 ad heavy at " " What. white. but. .. .. .382 8083 Do., rod, bush. .. .. .. .. 082 083 Do., spring hm. .. .. .. ca. Ci? Crux: receipts wen u little more "but! to- day. Wheat weaker. 300 bunch ot rd winter sold " 82 to Mc. Oata unbound. 300 bushel. Belling at mg to 43c. Barley under, 400 bushels ulna; u 50 to "e. Market Reports The Week. CANNED SALMON. Leading British Cattle Kuhn Tmomn Famou' Market. Manitoba Wheat. Wheat Markets. July. Sept. Dec; 506 89% “'4 'MN' we we 065 1200 1000 1000 1060 850 013 018 018 mi 78% (oun- 0 25 Mtttrdl dill " h0 10 00 " bt ll 00 " (I) 10 " 75% 91'; 110 950 043 Their compnnions instantly began the work of rescue, but it Wu glow work, and when the men wore reached Hor- mun wu dead from suffocation and Peterson lived but . few Ilium. Hot-an had but -hored by the mug. for seven yous. ad leaves I nrtgt and four “In. Petuni- was a - I”, not an this. " 50 u.“ u. .u .\\I|LIIEEEI, “rally. The men were at work at the bottom of s trench fifteen feet deep, which w-being dug for a sewer on the ground. of St. May’s College at that pines, Sudden» Iy the tides give way without warning. and tom of and: and mud buried the two men, Corry, IU., July 10.--0dhn Hermann. and Cyrus Peterson were killed in l cave-in in Northeast to-day. The men "nbukl'tl, N. J.. doipttteh: Avalon] of thing tactics of highwuymen and mo- bing childrm of their own ages on the Mreets in broad daylight, the youngu-t criminal trio in the history of local po- lim- r031 rds fared I'ucordvy Stanton. The prGonrrs were Philip Reilly. 12 your: old, and his brothers John and Frankie, 10 and 4 your; old. .t1tspectivel.v. The speeifie charge on which they were ur» reretd was for holding up 7-year-old Willie Larkin and stating from him a, pocketbook containing “.80. change- from a " bill his mother had given him to no to the store to purchase grace-rive. The complaint was made by the mother of the Urkin boy. The police inventi- gated the one and may that they dis- eovered that the trio has been leading a real desperado life all by themeehxm sleeping in burns and hallways and ply- ing their trade in the daytime close to,, the public Iehoole. The lather of the boy: was released from prison tut week and the mother is unable to take care of them. Overseer of the Poor Hurry L. Barcla appeared in court and stagnated that the children be turned over to an institution. at the same time producing evidence that the children were bereft on tieely of home influences. KILLED " A CAVE-l Two Suffocated in Trench , Three LOCI, Aged x2, " and 4, A: :1er of Holding Up and Robbin; Other Saul! Children. When work was resumed at the docks you; morning it was supposed that the strike would be limited to certain lun- ltllors, but the trans oration companies ‘were fiituppointed. a: a gctterttl strike was declared, “(acting all companim where freight handlers ttre employed. in consequence a heavy detail of police was sent to the docks. On their arrival they started to drive away the strikers, who were congregat- ed along the docks. Some of the Sink- (‘u resisted. and the police made a church but the strikers, stood thf-ir ground. The point were determined, and 1mm: to use their clubs. To this the strikers responded by throw"): stones. The police. however. stteetNaded y clearing the docks. So (or as can be learned no STRIKE " rumm- HANDLERS. FOR KORE IOHY. Buffalo, N. Y., July 10.-A gum-rah strike of freight handlers has hen de. elared at this port for an incremac in wage from 17 to 20 cents an hum. The trouhie had its inception yesterday, when the freight handlers at the New York Central freight house quit work alleging that an ngroement Micron) they were to 100(ch higher pay from. tilt; first of July had not been earried on . I This de:laration was made by a. tough, Pierre Adam, to the prison nu- thontles and lawyers who were trying to persuade him to appeal for a cozmuutu- tion of his death sentence for murder. He has resisted the perm-ions pangsb ontly for three weeks, and elamors to have his head chopped oft, yet the nu- thorities do not comply with his wi-h. The position is a curious one. As the law stands it nmeribes that execution. shall be pubius. but since the guilluti.ae was runoved some years ago trom the notorious Place de la Itoquette the local officials everywhere have succen't'ully resisted the attempts to secure a new site and the guillotine has lain idle in n shed, the officers of justice not u-utur- ing to offend any part of the city by m- doting upon its erection. They have conscqucntly persuaded every Perot condemned to death to appeal for a commutation, which has been fort'auutla granted. Adam’s unprecedented refusal crcntm a difficulty. A puhlic execution inw- riably leads to a disgusting earatmal and misbehaviour by the scum of the city, and the establishment of the Tutils tine anywhere without the uncut of the authoritica representing tho rc- speetable citizens, would inevitably amuse anger. Hence the telnet-nice to carry out death sentences. Bill, an» undcr discussion alternatively legaliz- ing prim” executions and 'tlrolishiua capital punishment. and Adam's "owl. attituch may lead to the passing ot one or When work Paris, July! o.--", van: to be guil- lotined. They combat-ad me to death, and they dull execute me. I'll have none of their pardons. There is no reason for I revising of any sentence. Paris has not seen an execution in tea years, nud'l'm going to give them the might free." PRISONER " PARIS INSISTS ON BEIIG GUILLOTINED. Officials in a t!aot'dary--Averse to t)tu fending Aaty Satin of Paris try. Public ExeetrtiorvmReqrit" So Bar Obtain“. STRIKE AT IMrhi.0. DESPERATE HIGHWAYMEN. “cur orr MY HEAD.” the oiher. one was seriouoly injure in Trench They were r and cumulus Md over to an time producmg were brreft on- “NI! I {will I'IV any silk-w "Wen. may " the benefit of N "Na! Why r,l hither!" “I am sure y up!!!" cried by N! In c1 a. “Go i an you end-um y can!” “It is an ml ttd't quite I ‘u Crag? Co vary Ity m try, /"J2sU.' oratlide the 'e er, tog Hm the A Clapton. u F tielfr's [Mia Everard. "1 my well, an dramatic gift eye. with m unkind 'tever t 'The it. but ter." Tout "He Ono's f either. nth ." rimony bet u him ttte ine even thed. will he was remarkt ber nude to tt This degree I Bandy'l f,",',','.",, II Beotehmmt, "TI - was ah “Game. have' IT IS [I] (M ol ll " " “I! TOYS Fro. Lend a. You M what I kn all Has h “ll ll

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