West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 1 Aug 1907, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

jzed the ,uz:i:’ away the "HMithiness of the flesh and spirit" which is urged us by the aposile in 2 Cor. 7: 1. 18. x'bol,r garmerisâ€"Thke attire of the TV. The Pricsts consccrated (vs. 12, 19.) 12. Wash them with waterâ€"They were to be clean before they ministered before the Lorl. This washing symbolâ€" represented the lzulho n of i}o}l’;i;; ple from the world." HI. The tabernacle consecrated (ve. 9 11). 0. The anotnting ollâ€";Thh was a partiâ€" eular oil compounded for the urpases here stated and for no other, ‘kn Lord had given Moses careful directions botit as to flge oil and the manner in which It was to be holy. Anoint the tabernaâ€" cle, eteâ€""The ceremony of anointing with oil denoted the setting apart and eonsecration of an object to a holy use." Toâ€"day we need the beavenly anointing. Shall be holyâ€"The Holy Spirit is the t agent of sanctification. His puriâ€" work is bere typilied by the anâ€" oil. (God‘s true church is a holy church (Eph. 5, 25â€"27). 8. Set up the courtâ€"The Rangings or screens, which were to serve as a fence about the court were attached by wilver hooks to pillars of brass resting in sockets of brass. The court gateâ€"The gate of the court was on the east side and was thirty feet wide. "The court it was to be modrzfio;â€"i-“fi.)“ltm;: not to be used upon foreigners, or for the p of anointing the flesh, but it was lo he holy An:fno tha ::}.'....‘:t laid each week twelve loaves of bread, ;’vhmmuu the twelve tribes of Israel. loaves were in two pi and were rmwodmo::’y.d&bhth. "'l‘hh.’o stale loaves were eaten by the priests in the sanctuary. the candlestickâ€"This wunththemth;ideofthboly . It was made o and m“m arms. The hm’u::)’:g canâ€" dlestick is not stated. lampsâ€"The seven lamps which wcn"fland on top of these were mpfiliod th g:o olive oil (27:20) from oll vessels. en sigâ€" nifies w}eeu_on. So the Christian is to and ro- for the frankincense, and with flagons and bow!s. Upon it were and 23 in height. the things.... upon itâ€"The table was provided with dnn. Cod met his people. IL The furn:skings (vs. ). ark of the testimomyâ€"This was an.ilu)‘ chest made of seacia wood, overlaid within azd without with gold. It was 3% feet in length and 2%% fcet in width and depth. Its lid was called the "mercyâ€" scat" and was overlaid with gold, with & golden rim around it. There were @wo cherubim above the mercyâ€"seat, one at each end. Within the ark were placâ€" ed the stone tables of the law, a pot of manna and Aaron‘s rod that budded. cover the ark.â€""Screen the ark."â€"R. V. This veil or curtain hung between the holy of holies and the holy Ilace. ms:ld«l from four pillars. the ta This occupied a place on the north side of the sanctuary. It was made of acacia wood, overlaid with pure rld,..dhd.mdrldnounrllt. t was 3 feet in len.;.l, }% in breadth, and 234 in height. the things.... upon ments. The first, situated toward the east, was called the sanctuary or holy place. It was 30 feet long and 15 feet wide and contained the altar of incense, the table of shew bread, and the candleâ€" stick. The other spartment was called the holy of holies, It was 15 feet each '-:J;huu being a cube, and its only a of furniture was the ark of the covenant. The open court in the front ol the tabernacle proper was 75 feet each way, and contzained the laver and altar of burnt offering. tent of the congregaâ€" tienâ€""Tent of meeting"â€"R. V. That is, "The tabernacle, the tent of mee'.in£ Rawlinson), thus putting the two wor !‘h apposition. It was the place where enclosure, and was covered by a large tent spread over it, thus Krotecting it from sun and rain. It had two apartâ€" left to human ingenuity. If it had been, it would have been wrong.â€"Torrey. set upâ€"Each part had been made ready but not yet put together. All the parts of the tabernacle of God, the mystery of redemption, will present one harmonious whole.â€"Adamson. tabernacleâ€"The tabâ€" ernacle consisted of three apartments, the outer court, the sanctuary, and the holy of holies. The entire enclosure was 100 cubits by 50 cubits, or allowing 18 inches to a cubit, 150 feet by 75 feet. It was surrounded by fine twined linen screens, hung by silver hooks upon pilâ€" lars of brass. The tabernacle proper‘ was situated in the western half of this s.. 1, 2). 1. the Lord spakeâ€"For six or eight months the peopie had been makâ€" ing the tabernacle according to the patâ€" tern which Moses had received in the mount, and now the Lord gives direcâ€" tions concerning its erection. ‘"When God talks with us we should listen. Not a syllable of the divine message should be lost. htmbe-hcnhpfluring up every speech of God."â€"Parker. a year, lacking fourteen days, from the & year, lukilmutuen days, from the time they had Egypt, and more than eight months since the worship of the every ch of God. â€"Farker. 2. zn d.y_â€"mgt day of Abib or Nisan, Sunday School, LESSON VLâ€"AUGUST 4, 1907. Tabernacle.â€" Exod. 40: :â€"13, 34538 mmentary.â€"I. The tabernacle (vs. In 1000 the International Association of Machinists spent over $3,000,300 in establishing a nineâ€"hour day. Last year the International Typographical Union spent over $3,000,000 in establishing an t over $3,000,000 in :mt‘lont day. Y. The tabernacle people. "The conâ€" gregation" of God‘s saints (vs. 2, 6, 7, 12), are: Redeemed (Psa. 77, 15; Luke 1, 68); Saved (Psa. 106, 8â€"10; Matt. 1, 21.) Separated (Exod. 33, 16; Lev. 20, 26.) Peculiar (Deut. 14, 2; Exod. 19, 5; I. Pet. 2, 9.) Guided (Psa. 1852; John 16, 13.) Loved (II. Chron. 2, 11; Gal. 2, 20.) Blessed (Chron. 31, 10; Eg:. 1, 3.) Strengthened (Psa. 29, 11; Phol. 4, 13.) VI. The tabernacle priests. Washed (v. 12.) Clothed (v. 13.) Anointed (v. 13.) Sanctified (v. 13.) We are to be priests to God. We are to be cleansed from sin, clothed _ with the robe of righteousness, _ anointed by the Holy Spirit and set apart for the service of God. Holiness becomes (God‘s house, holiness becomes God‘s people and God‘s priests. If you are to be holy God must make you so, and only God can keep you so. But you have your part to do as well as he. Believe God loves you and longs for you, that he may bless goxil Wl Nee t( seodl, tow 6 thk c ___IH. The tabernacle entrance. 1. Only _one door (vs. #â€"12.) No other way to God (Acts 4, 12.) 2. No lock, bar or bolt (John 10, 09.) 3. Wide, Thirty feet. Whosoever will (Rev. 22, 17.) 4. Faced east. Enter only in the light (John 3, 21.) Christ said, "I am the door" (John 16, 7.) Opened for entrance, closed for security. Jesus is the door out of slayâ€" ery into freedom, out of sin into holiâ€" ness, out of the field into the fold, out of earth into heaven. "The most holy place was completely dark, and no one was allowed to enter except the high priest once a year, on the annual day of atonement." _ "So gloriously did the eloud appear about the tent, and so wonderfully did the divine glory fill the interior of the sacred dwelling, that Moses could not enter. IV. The Tabernacle materials: Gold (v. 5.) Glory (Rev. 21, 21â€"24.) Silver (Exod. 26, 19â€"25.) Redemption (1 Pet. 1â€"10.) Brass (Exod. 26, 11.) Judgment (Num. 21, 6â€"9; John 3, 14; Rev. 2, 18.) Linen (Lev. 6, 10.) Righteousness (Rev. 19, 8.) Wood (Exod. 26, 29.)) Humanity (Gen. 22, 6.) Goat‘s hair (Exod. 25, 4.) Separation (Matt. 25, 32; Heb, 7, 26.) Ram‘s skin (Exod. 26, 14.) Death (Gen. 22, 13.) Badgers skin (Exod. 26, 14.) No reputation (Phil. 2, 7). morkuses .. ye _ _ _ wC CE n folll HHOg ways changing. ever try experiâ€" g?n‘!':‘*es : in %ofng To have Jomâ€" pany." ‘fie guccessful preacher says to iral ask, in every difficult place, what John Stuart Mill [v; said to have asked toward the last of his life: "What would Jesus of Nazareth have done if he had been in my place?" Let us look at our pattern and follow Him. "Do as I have s:ne to you" (John 13, 15) "Those things...... ye have......seen in me, do" (Phil. 4, 9). . "Ye have us for an example" (Phil. 3, 17). "Be ye followers of me" (I. Cor. 4, 16). _ The successful business man dares to say: "Do as I do; I keep my books by double entry; I divide my proâ€" fits with my employees; I never do myâ€" self what I can afford to hire others to do; I never employ incompetent help." The successful housewife dl:el to say: "Do as I do. I have a rluo for everyâ€" thing, and keep cvor{tb ng in its place. I‘tn‘t my servants kindly, and am not er gave & boy an example in arithmetic, witr' the printed rule. Perseveringly, the boy tried, but, failing, laid his head on the desk and sobbed. The teacher sat beside him, patiently worked out the example, and showed him how. God commanded, "Be ye holy," and ?ve the law, But when men failed to kee it, He sent Jesus to show them how. lgo is the pattern for our imitation. Let us II. The tabernacle a %ntern. Divinely made (Exod. 25, 40; Heb. 8, 5). Divinely filled (Exod. 40, 34). Christ is our patâ€" tern (John 13, 15; Matt. 11, 29; I. gt. 2, 21). We are a pattern (I. Tim. 1, 16; Phil. 4, 9). "Be likeminded one toward another according to the example of Christ" (Rom. 15, 5, margin). A teachâ€" 1. The tabernacle a type. 1. Type of Christ who "dwelt" tabernacled among men (Johnâ€"1, 14; 2, 21). Christ not only took on Him the nature of men; He came and dwelt among men. She herds, soldiers and sojourners dwell K tents. Jesus did not dwell in a manâ€" sion, but lowly like a shepherd; not in a palace, but in a place of warfare, like a soldier, for He was prophesied to bruise the heel of the serpent (Gen. 3, 14); not in a home, but in a tent, as the patriarchs, who confessed they were strangers and pilgrims (Heb. 11, 13, 14). 2. Type of the Church of God. (a) Planâ€" ned by "the Lord" (v. 1); (I. Cor. 3, 9). (b) Built by Christ (Matt. 16, 18). (c) United "through the Spirit" (Eph, 2, 22; I. Cor. 12, 13). 3. Type of every true Christian. (a) Beloved by God (1. John, 4, 9, 10). (b) Redeemed by Christ (L. Pet. 1, 18, 190). (c) Indwelt by the Spirit (l.__C(E_. 3,‘ 19; 6, 1_9; I. John 4, 13). was a pillar (Exod. 13. 21) leading the way before them. 2. During the night it became a pillar of fire giving light to every part of the Israelitish camp. 3. It was a covering, protecting them from the scorching rays of the sun. See Num. 9, 15â€"23; Psa. 105, 39, 1 Cor. 10; 1, 2. PRACTICAL APPLICATION. distinct purposes: 1. During the day it was a pirl:r (Exod. 13. RI?GIMIM the 34, 38). 34. A cloud covered, etc.â€"Thus holy nointixg oil is an emblem of the Holy Spirit. Sanctify himâ€"The work of consecration was not complete until a ram had been slain and some of its blood had been put upon Aaron‘s right ear, hand and foot, and sprinkled upon his garments. &, priests, and especially of the high priest, was very elaborate, and is minutely desâ€" ecribed in chapter 28. "The priests did not wear their sacred dresses outside of the tabernacle." Anoint himâ€"The anointâ€" ing of sacred persons signified that they ewre set apart to the service of God. The V. The cloud filling the tabernacle (vs. When the shot was fired the fleeing man was in front of the Dunbar mperty, and within plain sight from spot from which the shot was fired about 300 or 400 feet away. After firing this . At the inquest three witnesses George M. Cadenhead and Miss Kate Cadenhead, brother and niece of Miss Elizabeth Caâ€" denhead, who were with her at the time of her death, and Cyrus Gillette, the sentry who is alleged to have fired the fatal shot while in pursuit of a desertâ€" er, were examined. It appears that it was the first shot fired by Gillette that struck the woman. any international complications, as all the British Government will ask will be that the matterâ€" be thoroughly investiâ€" gated and justice done. Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., despatch: E. S. B. Sutton received appointment yesâ€" terday to look after the interests of the British Government and the Cadenheads in the matter of the shooting of Miss Cadenhead, of Kingston, who was shot by a soldier at Fort Brady. He states, however, that he sees no likelihood of WHEN GILLETTE FIRED THE FATAL SHOT. Inquest Begun at Sault Ste. Marie Yesâ€" terdayâ€"No International Complicaâ€" tions Likely to Arise. DESERTER WAS ound. Several other buildings, includâ€" g‘ the fine residence of the Bflckbums, Canada factory, in which the W.; C. Edâ€" wards Company is largely interested, sevâ€" eral piles of valuable lumber, Blackburn & Russell‘s mica warehouses, Foley‘s Hoâ€" 'tol, No. 6 fire station, C. J. Neale‘s groâ€" cery store, and the main office of the Edwards Company are all burned to the #444444400400000404 000094 98880000404â€"444040444444444444 +4 a Senator Edwards is the head. The W. C. Edwards sash and door factory, the planing mill, the library bureau of the An Ottawa, Ont., special despatch says: The New Edinburgh portion of the city, which is adjacent to the Government House, and lying to the east of the Rideau River, was visited by a disasâ€" trous fire this morning. The total loss is put at $300,000. Of this amount about $250,000 will have to be borne by the W. C. Edwards Company, of which firm Sash and Door Factory, Planing Mill, Fire Station, Hotel, Store, Etc., Burned. DISASTROUS FIRE AT CITY OF OTTAWA. Who will IN PLAIN VIEW REAR ADMIRAL ROBLEY D. EVANS, have charge of the United States Pacific Squadron. The police are becoming disaffected because of the extra work entailed by the strike, and are demanding additional to cose at the end of the week for the same reason. Scores of thousands of men will then be without work. the largest spinning mills in this | :1;; shut down toâ€"day. Almost all the other millé give notice that they will be forced to cose at the end of the weelk far 41. coal as a consequence of the continued strike of the dock laborers here, one of mo w1 at. .8 CRCCOARVCO uP . CRC shooting is a relative of the Malloch inE mss Ob SHOPS CLOSING DOWN FOR WANT OF COALâ€"POLICE KICKING. shot Gillette ran on down the walk to the Dunbar property and into the Dunâ€" bar yard, where he took his second shot at the man just as he was about to go out of sight behind some buildings. This is the story as it develops from the testimony of the three witnesses, and further explanation was given by Gillette when he went with the jury and officials after the afternoon session of the inquest had adjourned, and took them over the scene of the whole affair. Hodgson, the alleged deserter, was present at the inquest, but he was not called upon to participate in any way. family of this city. 000 insurance. The hotel, the fire staâ€" tion and the grocery store were not valuâ€" able buildings. The wind was blowing northeast, and in this way the main mill was saved. Had the wind been in a westâ€" erly direction the whole mill, which is one of the most modern and best equipâ€" ped in the Dominion, would havee‘Leen totally destroyed. Some very fine new machinery was placed in the planing mill yesterday. The lumber piles are burning themselves out on the e of the Otâ€" tawa River, where it i:dfoined by the Rideau. f The W. C. Edwards & Company main lumber mill lies on the west side of the Rideau River, which at this point is conâ€" nected with a bridge, over which the street cars run along Sussex street to and from Rockliffe and Esplanade. The lumber piles destroyed were principally hardwood. Altogether about two milâ€" lion feet of lumber was burned. Gordon Edwards was seen, and he laces the loss of the firm at nearly :300,000, upon which there is about $200,â€" Miss Oldenheu‘l,“the victim of the Belfast, July BELFAST STRIKE. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 290.â€"Unsable to obtain week, JIadge contunues to show a ¢ tone and the outlook for fall and 'E’:: is excellent. Crops in this part of the country generally promise well. London: The activity in local trade holds up well despite the disaster which visited the retail district recently. Manuâ€" facturers and wholesalers report an exâ€" cellent demand for goods. Collections show improvement. : Ottawa: There has been some improveâ€" ment in collections here during the past week. Trade continues to show a rood Hamilton: An excellent volume of sumâ€" mer business continues to move here, and the outlook for fall trade is exceedâ€" ingly satisfactory. Collections are genâ€" erally fair. Country produce is coming forward well and values hold firm. _ Vancouver and Victoriat _ Summer trade has been exceedingly heavy along the Coast. Industrial activity in the interior and the northern part of the Province has resulted in an excellent deâ€" mand for all lines of wholesale goods. Collections also have been fair to good. The shipping trade is showing steady growth. Prices of commodities generally hold firm. There is still some complaint about the searcity of labor. Winnipeg: There is generally a good tone to trade throughout this part of Canada. The excellent condition of the erops is having a good effect upon the general sentiment of business, In all parts of the country the expectations are for a heavy yield of grain and the quality of the crop is expected to be good. C | _ Montreal: If there has been any change in trade conditions here during the past week it has been more a change of sentiment regarding the future than one of actual conditions. That is to say, that collections in the western country and, indeed, to some extent in all Canâ€" ada, having shown some im'provement, the outlook for the future is regarded as more favorable than ever. It would appear that although summer trade was late in setting in, its volume will not be behind that of previous years. A splenâ€" did retail trade is now moving in all diâ€" rections. In dry goods this is particuâ€" larly the case. The reâ€"order business for summer lines is brisk and fall and winâ€" ter trade is exceedingly heavy. Some lines of trade report an astomshing exâ€" pansion over the business done last year. This is the case with the readyâ€"made clothing trade. In the matter of readyâ€" made cioaks it is said business has been 50 per cent. heavier than ever before. There is also a very gratifying improveâ€" ment in the quality of the trade doing. All lines of iron and steel are in brisk demand. Mills and car foundries are working to capacity and prices are firm. The boot and shoe industry reports great activity in preparation for fall business,. ‘There is a good business in groceries. Sugars are quoted ten cents lower, but are expected to again adâ€" vance. London.â€"Liverpool and London cables are firmer at 12c to 13c per lb., dressed weight; refrigerator beef is quoted at 9c to 10c per pound. ‘Toledo ... New York ... ... Detrolt ... ... ..« Bt. Louls ... ... .. Dultth .... iss .+ Hopâ€"Prlebivhxch:;n:ed' :: ‘3‘0 .l‘;r selects and $6.65 for lights ana fats. FLOUR PRICES. Flourâ€"Mantiboa patent, $4.60, track, Toâ€" ronto; Ontario, $0 per cent. patent, $3.50 bid for export; Manitoba patent, â€" special brands, $5; second patent, $4.40; _ strong bakers‘ , $4.30. LEADING WHEAT MARKETS. July. Sept. Dec. Milch Cowsâ€"The demand for milkers and springers was a little better, but prices were not any higher. ‘There is a fair demand for ¢gl;lnlen of good quality that will come in about October. Prices ranged from $25 to $57.50 e? Veal Calvesâ€"Prices for veal calvos wore lower, in sympathy with the beef cattle. Quotations ranged from $3.50 to $6 rer owt. Prime new milkâ€"fed calves would br ng $6.50 per cwt. Sheep and Lambsâ€"Export ewes sold at $4.50 to $4.75; buck§ $3.75 to §4; culls $R to $.i5 per cwt.; lambs $.75 to $7.50 per ewt., or, in other words, 6%c to TÂ¥e Ib. flog:?rllcu‘ u{:chun;ed)t m for selects Feeders and Stockersâ€"H. Murby reports large receipts of stocks this week, chicfivy weighing from 500 to 800 pounds, and of an inferior quality. _ These kind sold at low prices, but will go comsiderably lower yet. Mr. Murby bought about 100 head toâ€"day at prices ranging from s%c to 3%c for 750 to 850 steers with some &ullty. and $3.65 to $3.80 for steers 900 to 1, pounds of good quality, Butchersâ€"Choice picked lots sold at $4.90 to $5.15; loads of good at $4.50 to $4.90; fair to good cows $3.75 to $4.25; common cows $2.40 to $3 per ewt. Exportersâ€"Few exporters were offered, and those reported sold mround $5 to $.2% per Cwt. But dealers stated thai had there been cattle of good enough qua‘lity they would have brought $5.50 pe: ewt. Export bu‘ls so!gnuwu.fiopercwg. mc C Slow and dull was the condition of the cattle market toâ€"day. _ Receipts, commencâ€" ing at the Junction on Monday, have been so liberal this week that buyers have been able to fill their ‘orders at rower rates tuan auny week this season, and the market toâ€"day was slow at the decline. The market is ail the way from 20c to 40e lower than a week ago, the most decline being on the common and medium grades. < A few lots of good cattle were on sa.c, but the bulk of offerings were of the comâ€" mon to medium qualities. Receipts of live stock at the city market, &s reported by the railways, were 114 carâ€" loads, composed of 1,504 cattle, 1,777 hogs, 2,007 sheep and lambs, with about 300 calves. ‘Chickens, Spring, 1b. ... .. 0 15 0 18 Fowl ID: ... :.+. :+ se« «++ 0 10 0 12 Ducks, ID. ... ... ... c....0 016 0 00 ‘Turkeys, Yb. ... \ss) ... s.. 0 MB 0 16 Potatoes, per bag ... ...... 0 90 1 00 Beef, hindquartrs ... ... .. 8 76 10 35 Do., forequarters ... ..... 6 00 7 50 Do., choice, carcase ....... 8 50 9 50 Do., medium, carcase ..... 7 50 8 00 Mutton, per ewt. ... ... ... 9 00 10 00 Vea!, pEF CWL. ... ...) 1...+ 800 10 00 Lamb, per ewt. ... ... ..... 14 00 16 00 TORONTO LIVE SPOCK MARKBT. Hay in moderate receipts, with prices firm, there being sales of 15 loads at $17 to $18 & ton for old, and at $14$ to $14 for new. Straw is noptinal at $13 & ton. Dressed hogs are steady. with light quoted at $9.50 to $9.75, and heavy at $9.%. Wheat, white, bush, ... ...$ 0 91 $092 Do., red, bush. ... ... ... 0 Â¥1 0 92 Do.. Spring. bush. ... ... O 25 0 $6 ‘The receipts of grain here con:inue small, consisting toâ€"day of only 100 bushels of vels, which sold at Slc per bushel _ > _ Market Reports ues ses ees ses eas ons 93 â€" BRITISH CATTLE MARKETS TORONTO FARMERS‘ MARKET Bradstreet‘s Trade Review. 103% 97 % 98% 14 00 9 15 of Proposal Before Britisk Comme: Vote Him Quarter Million. Lon Juiy ap Oomm?)::' todn’y Pr nerman presented a Lightning struck numerous buillinge, the Sherif{ street market house was set on fire by lightning, and cousiderable damage done. A number of persons were struck and stunned. It is reported that two small vossels laden with oil were completcly wrocked on the llake near the city, but no trace D UTEATCOY Senl TAC ©iUy was enveloped in almost total darkness for fifieen minutes, trees were uproote 1, small buildings blown down and all the loose and lighter structures aloung the lake front and at the amusement perks were blown from their places and smashed to pieces. Cleveland, Ohia, July 20.â€"Many lives were imperilled and thousands cf dolâ€" lars of damage was done by a storm at Cleveland toâ€"day, _ While the city City Swept by Storm Which Destroyed Large Amount of Propcriy. There is a continuous roer snd {freâ€" | quent explosions oceur, gpurmice being thrown onto the Island of Nukualofa, ‘ thirty miles distant. Tle fong« Govâ€" j ernment Gazette reports that land is forming round the scene of the erupuion ; and it is believed that a new ijsland is in course of formation. I A Remarkable Phenomcnon Reported From Tongsa Islands, London, July 29.â€" 4A remarkable Lho- nomenon is reported from Eydneg & despatch to the Daily Mail. Advices from the Tonga Iselands, dated Jaly 5, state that sovonr distinct columas of fire, smoke, steam and black pumics stone, all within an ares of two miles, have been visible for a fortnight from Togatabu, the lorgest island of the group. _ The colamns, which appear te arise from veritable holes in the sem, are estimated to be 250 fest in hcight. The ocean is very derâ€"p at this spot. A Midland despatch: Midliand received another shock tzir morning by an acâ€" cident in the G. T. R. yards. gr. J. G. Fellows was working on the G. T. R. track as a section hand, and stepping off one track to allow an engine to pas he stepped in front of the car, 'm was an instant later struck by an engsine coming from the opposite direction. The unfortunate man was knocked down with his body across the track, and one wheel passed over the centre of the body, killing him instantly. Mr. J. G. Fellows Run Over in G. T. R. Yard at Midland. Mr. Recorder Dupuis further _ told Kutzman that he was letting him off easy. "Cases such as yours," he said, "will in future be, dealt with in such a way that the offenders will‘ suffer the utmost ecverity of the law." Kutemen was fined $20 and costs or one month in jail. clemency fer his client, saying, "this is a poor man, your Honor." Kutzran was charged, in the words of the comâ€" plaint, with selling milk, "the vehicle for contagion or infection, inasmuch as the mixer, cans and measures employed were dirty." mt to the oomflmk"cmfln: roof c ployed by Mr. Recordar _I?upz toâ€"dlag,. when counsel for Loute Kuirzmas, «#l5â€" man, of 216 5t. George street, adised for Montreal, July 2@,~â€"â€""Look st shs poor children he and others are couding Recorder Dupuis Says Dirty Vesssic A«» Killing the Infenta. a foot on either side the great agnake lifted ~ its head, throwing â€"Anderser twenty feet. The serpent then made a rush for the lake, holding it head six feet above the ground, hissing like a steara engine. In its way it broke branches of trees three and four inches in diameter. A big snake hunt is being arranged. Joseph Anderson and W. Nightingale, while walking through high grass near the lake yesterday, attempted toâ€" step over what they thought was a large fi It was the snake. While Anderson Valley, Neb.; A great water python, forty feet long, twelve inches in diaâ€" meter and with a head the size of a bushel basket, is terrorizing the country around about Ages Lakes, several miles east of here. Great Water Python Terroriging Neâ€" braska People. New York, uly 290.â€"The Herald has received the following ~despatch from tions. It was thought when Bileflant was sentenced that his execution was impossible because of the lack of this appropriation, but now it is known that the appropriation passed the Chamber of Deputies during the confusion of the closing days of the session by a majority of 13. This fact escaped public notice at the time. The time allowed by law for Soleilant to appeal from the death sentence expires toâ€"morrow at midnight. * wreckage can be found. the Chamber zf‘ Deputies :&r.n an appropriation $5,200 for execuâ€" tions It was thought Bileilant Brest; uly 29.â€"In the course of the increasing poEulur clamor for the carryâ€" ing out of the death sentence im&oud last Tuesday upon a man named Silielâ€" ant for the murder of a little girl under particularly atrocious circumstances, esâ€" pecially as it has been discovered that CLAMOR FOR THE EXECUTION OF A FRENCH MURDERER. GRANT FOR LORD CROMER. CLEVELAND IN DARKNESS, OCEAN SHOOTING FIRE. WANTS HIS HEAD. SEA SERPENT ON LAND. INSTANTLY KILLED, Pr |2 s# Juiy 29. the se 3‘?"‘:‘ & n-m“-;".?;fi MILKMAN REBUKED. »fF it in i e ubrin: ApE : T rBn . * The trouble uro-evfn::; the hiring of & to take of anâ€" then Teborer atho had knockna onf ters, plumbers, and, in fact, all depart ments of the building trade. ; New York, July 29.â€"Frank H Warâ€" ner, who yesterday shot and kilied Mis=s Esther _ Norling, and _ dangerously wounded John C. Wiison, was still unâ€" conscious in Bellevue Mospital toâ€"day from the blows inflicted by a ‘longshoreâ€" man, who stopped his flight after the shooting ard beat him with a cotton hook. The doctors were unable to preâ€" dict whether or not he will yecover. Mr. Wilson, one of his victims, who was whot in the back, suffered a bad turn during the night, but rallied and was said toâ€"day to have a fair chance of recovery. A Galt delgatch: Because in finishing up a job at the C. Turnbull‘s factory exâ€" tension, a nonâ€"union man was hired, the masons and bricklayers were ordered out and the trouble has extended to carpenâ€" All Because One Nonmâ€"Union Man Was She had evidently in a fit of insa inflicted a number of terrible cuts her own head with a hatchet, wi bloody and hairmatted, lay beside on the floor. Mr. Utz‘s other daught fever, and recently his wit sympathy is felt for him. WILSOK, ONE OF H1is VICTIMS, HAS CHANCE TO RECOVER. St. Catharines despatch: A Humberâ€" stone young lady, fii- Anna Caroline Utz, the twentyâ€"twoâ€"yearâ€"old â€" daughier of John Utz, died under extremely sad circumstances, She had been euttering from what the doctors calledl typhoid fever. _ Khe did not appear to be severeâ€" ly ill, and asked that no one sit up with her at night, as she could take her mediâ€" cine herself. Early in the morning Mr. Utz went to his daughter‘s bedroom to see if she required anything. The room was empty, and a seanrch was instituted. The girl was finally found in a shop on the promâ€" lses. The girl died while her injuries w being attended to by a physician. HUMBERSTONE GIRL HACKS XEAD WITH A HATCHET. They found him in the shed with his throat and wrists terribly gashed by a razor. He had lost a lot of blood, and the physicians at St, Michael‘s Hospital, where he was taken in the police ambuâ€" lance, have small hopes of his recovery. His landlady observed that he was actâ€" ing strangely, and when he went to a shed a little after midnight, got Izzie Burdman, of 46 Edward street, and a neighbor named Arthur Ellis, to search for him. Toronto despatch: Brooding over his domestic troubles made Abraham Joseph Igvien, a Jew, aged abut 38, rooming at 125 Chestnut street, make.a most desperate attmept at suicide. _ Three months ago he quarreled with his wife, who lives at 136 Charleston street, Newâ€" ark, N.J., and left home. A week ago he arrived in Toronto, and made no atâ€" tempt to find work. ___â€"_ _ Brooded Over Domestic DifficulticsHe Made a Determined Attempt to End His Lifeâ€"Comes From Newark, N. J. A DESPONDENT TORONTO JEW INâ€" FLICTS FATAL INJURIES, DETERMINFED SUICIDE. CUT THROAT AND WRIST The indications are that the eubject will be thrashed out in Parliament durâ€" ing the fall, and that January and Feb ruary, 1908, will see the Congo Free State a colony of Belgium instead of a personal dependency of King Leopold. _ The other side {Liberals and Radicals) also desire to give the Congo full autonâ€" cmy, but insist that unless the adminis tration is made directly responsible to Parliament there will be no way of corâ€" recting present abuses and preventing the exploitation of the natives for the benefit of the rubber and ivory companâ€" ies. _ Belgium is entirely without colonial law, and the Royalist party is secking to escape the difficulty this has caused by converting the present administration into an autonomous Government not reâ€" #ponsible to Parliament. No difficult'y about the treaty of anâ€" nexation itself is anticipated, the trouble lying in another quarter. M ... The proposed transfer comes at a time when Major Lemair‘s charges of Congo atrocities are again directing attention to the past administration. Me produces statements from six native women who were subjected to illâ€"treatment and then sold at_Nitinga Post, and who then saw their children killed before their eves, Brussels, July 29.â€"The close of King l4opold‘s long struggle to etave off the annexation of the Congo to Belgium and to retain his personal sovereignty over this rich and extensive African State is foreshadowed in the agreement reached on July 12 between the Belgian and the Congo Governments elaborating the terms upon which the Congo Free State shall pass into the possession of January or February Will See the Free State Pass From Beneath the Control of King Leopoldâ€"Question of Coloâ€" nial Law Causing Some Difficuity. CONGO WILL BECOME A COLONY OF BUILDING STRIKE AT GALT WARNER MAy DIF. ible Death of a Typhoid Fever Patient, Selfâ€"Inflicted During Her Deliriumâ€"Was Not Regardsd as Severe Case. Called on the Job. LATEST MOVE. ‘dnuiht'vr in his wife died M Onsiow, standing next m« gentioms .rnln“ the dGo arrivals with g takable look 0 blue eves. the dista ticwe llo\\'] etatl bocker #1aad her paper, and downcast _ eyes wase . a patheti tha Ws®e werd equai i« eaid the watched young 1 ms if on ’mi«m pamon giz templation . wh dig AnC m jump it who did rassed | beas no X the 0 £n as and « very fe matche velling Nevert) stray 1 ored hi gestive t« velvety i ly, wide « laches, a scrutiny As the notice we pape it ner, as paper. wi :eexio‘n dressed with W t1 ids e@rria Z'_he #peake 18 she NJY . very n & tr vour CH

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy