IMURINE in: o" n the no Ion. thi., lg unpuo and 0v.- "at. 'l. "at. _ - mad by In. wild ' mail-A rim-0y the {at [ I 1-m- , around y Eyes ,5. ring an up u on. of WWI“- |llm on. do“ nu an 1909 Mit. -'.‘Ml. NqphMMq In 5“ "l. q lâ€.- a thick man-.4 “DI. house q pain n10! umber ' Art" pa mad, Eyes. " " flnt )orl Mo. and I}. d“ " mine by the smoke nnd heat Ilia thought at tho chum of loving at Inuit one at her {will}. Baiting Ernest, who was by hot this when the discov- mod the hone on fire, she dropped hm amt of the window, nnd quickiy lollowed, just in time to an herself from n terrible duth in the tumes. All that remains of the four children no their little haiku burned to a erisp and totnlly unrecognizable, it being impuni- bie but night for friend. of the - u: tell on. from the other. Tho frantic volu- tried in "in to one be! {our younger children. who we“ huddled may: in their bed in the room from which on] chose. of nape In. cut off by tho "amen, which wore tut devouring the house. Many than she wu driven back by tho tiegee but, and IS an felt hone" being over- It was about no o'eloek that Fred Luau, a neighbor, punk. along the Vaughan road, heard cries foe help coming from the Oldfield home. AI he naked over he now that the not of the homo was In flames. He tried to tom the door, and just as he had succeeded Ernest "wield dropped from an up- 'ttairs window, closely followed by his mother, who tried piteously for some one to save her children. Had she not been restrained Mrs. Oldfield would have returned to the burning house through the door which Lucas had just a minute before forced in. Nhe could not be premium] to leave. but finally she was overcome Ind fell in a faint in the arms of Mr. Lucas, who made several heroic attempts to save the little ones. who met a terrible death in their bed in the upstairs room. A PlTlFl'L SCENE. Toronto dupnteh: Four link children oi Emu". oidt1eld, n hawker, of Wychwood Yuk. were burned to (lath hm night In tho bed in which thy hm! hm tucked sway by their loving mother but n few minutes before. Mrs. “mum herself had A narrow - u an nlno - eldest boy, Ernest, and it um) only by n nit-do that the who]. manly wan not wiped out. Mm. ou. tield mused to “Ye Brunt Iron death in the "an" by throwing hint Iron: the upotairs window, and leaping that him to the ground, ghoul ten feet below. THE DEAD: CHARLES. god - - ALBERT, - tive yun. WILLIAM, and (hm you". EDWARD, and on. var. Children " Mr. and Mrs. Emu Oldfield, o! Wychwud Park. Cal Oil [an brkded TFtth Bull“. Diana“ hummus: BURNED IN Friendr carried her to the home of Mid. Hudson, n neighbor. who lives close at hand. Her boy Ernest wa, also taken there, and Dr. Corripn, who was called, dressed their hauda and faces, which m-re painfully burned. Mrs. Oldfield mu grief-stricken and would not be romiorted. Frequently she made pitiful :appenli to the physiciamto tell it her four little one: were really dead or if they had escaped to the arms of those "rho had rushed to the scene. Mean. while word hnd been sent to the pre- Bill-£08 of Samuel Trees & Co. in the city, when Mr. OWield is employed. He mu told over the 'phone that one of his rhildren had been taken ill, and he was nah-d to come at once. As he ap- proached the house he saw it who in ruins and firemen prosecutin diligent search in the debris he feared tie wont, but could not believe, even when told by his grief-Itrieken wife, that their little) family had all been wiped out and their home destroyed by tire. The meeting between Mr. end Mrs. Oldfield wan iti- ful in the extreme. their only boy cant ing to them and all sobbing Utterly. The head» and hand. of Mrs. Oldfield nn-l Emu were wrapped in bandages. ANOTHER HOME or'TTRD. While Mrs. Oldfield and her boy were being tenderly cared for " the home of Mrs. Hudson, n bucket brigade worked herd for over an hour and Mich ended in saving adjoining property lrom destruction. but not before the home of Mr. June: Gill, immediately to the east of the Oldfield dwelling, wins completely gutted. Telephone mesa-gen were an: to the city lire department, but tor some reason there was ,ousiderattle delay in recording the can at vhe city depart- ment. Deputy Chief Noble, with Di, .trict Chiel Smedley and Ample tire. {lighting appliances. reached the yspe .0! the tire in good time alter reeeivmg .the message, and prevented the further ,epread ot the tumes. For T"' [intuit-lud- " An. At noon " the burning debris "mit. In! it a nan-h was bummed, and one use another all that was lett ot the Jon: limo victim ot the tragedy was .taken out Iron the min ot what In JVRRE CLUTCHING ONE ANOTHER at short time before s comfortable little home. From the position in which the bodies of the children were discovered it would seem thnt they all died clutching on nnother. Deputy Chief Noble search ed the ruin, and first lound e portion ot a bedstead. An the debris wns turned over the body of one child Wu dia. covered, then mother, and "other, till the lourth little vzcthn'o remains were taken out and lsid away on n door. Pr. Corrignn made on examination of the remains nnd directed Patrol Sergt. Mur. phy to summon Coroner Gilmour from the Seventh Ward. After viewing the bodies ot the little ones, the Coroner permitted, their removal to the undertak my room: of Mr. Arthur W. Miles. Col. lege street, where an inquest will be op- ened today. Dernty Chic! No'r'e and District (hie trmedtey later obtained a state. ment from the grierstrieke8 husband rand tether. Being at work at the tine, he could throw little light on the ".ireitattemt atttndjirtyhr..t.. --.. MOTHER TRIED TO SAVE THEM. " [IE-‘14 Ill-l ..-..‘-_..,_ - - The hottse occupied by the Oldfield, and in which the tour Mule children met their death mu on the Vaughn mad m York township, in the district know- :u “'yehvrood Park. The place is a quartet at a mile west of Batman street and that the nun distance north of 9!. Chi: avenue. "sd which in "all, the cily’o northern limit. The home In ot _ elephant commotion, two 'i'v'ii"Gii"fiiCikidjrpi' fccy,r,u.,e': HAD TO BE HELD BACK. edNive. other room and then Inlfowml her. self. The Muse and contents are a total Iona. The home and Ateet, were hinted for $300 in'the Royal Company. The fire which hut night drUroyed the two Home; and wiped mitJour young livm emphasized the need ot five protection, which the residents in that section recently petitioned tor. There have been five serious and de- uructive fires since Christmas. and Coroner Gilmour will be asked to like up the question of proper fire protection in connection with his in. quest. “any: high. The "whirl room tote melted bv a rather steep stair. case from the kitchen to a little hail upstairs. At either side of the mi:- way were the woman. The one " tttr. rear In: occupied by the children Frill the other by Mr. and Mrs. Old. Pitt. Other néarhy resident) aka . 'rin their effects out, tearing the tltttue4 will“ "tread. 7 - - - KING APRIES’ PALACE Discovered by British Archeolo- gisu in Memphis. - The funeral of the tour little ones will take’flaee on Monday ttfternoon from the inion Church. Wyehwood. London, May M.--Protesisor Flinders Petrie, giving an account of the work ot the British School of Archaeology to. day, said that the great result of this year " Memphis had been the discovery of the palace of King Apnea, the Phar- aoh Hophra ot the Bible, who was the contemporary of Jeremiah, B. C. 629 to 588. Hitherto no place bad been known in Egypt beyond the tower ot Medinet llabu, and some portion» of a rather earlier date. Following are the details of the palace; Length, 400 feet, very impressive; breadth, 200 feet; mid- dle court, 100 feet square; painted col- umns, 40 feet high; seven stone-lined walls, 15 feet thick. _ . . _ What Professor Petrie described as one supreme piece was the fitting of u palanquin of solid silver, a pound in weight, decorated with the bust of Hothor, with a gold lace of the finest workmanship of the time of Apries, A great gateway and immense walls de- scending deep in the mound indicated that there lay the ruins of successive palace: built one over the other. Pro. fessor Petrie prophesied that in six or eight years excavators might dig down to the earliest records oi the Egyptian Got Clear of the lee and Steamed on Her War The approach to the palace led up through a large mass of buildings to a platform at. a height of about 60 ieet above the plain. In the ruins, scale ar. mor, hitherto rarely found in Egypt, was discovered. Good bronze figures of the gods were also found. . . St. John, Nfhl., deapatch: The, Allan Line steamer Mongolian early to-day freed herself from the ice pack off the entrance to St. John's harbor in which she had been imprisoned tor two days. The Mongolian after releasing her- self from the loo pack did not make any attempt to enter St. John's har- bor, ice conditions making such a course apparently i"gg,ttittlt The steamer worked oft a on and at 8 l kingdom Neglected by Huh-d Slnmemo. Cal., Way 24.-- Judge Shields to-day granted a decree of di- vorce to Mrs. Miller H. Upon, on the [round of failure to provide; the speci- fieation to which the wife testified being Twenty Itch-inlaid Can Over an Blink-ell. that most of her husband'. time was devoted to baseball, when he ought to have been earning a living for his two children 1nd her-elf. Mr. and Mrs. Up non were promineIltAin society circles. Woodstock. Ont., despatch: A spec- tacular freight wreck occurred on the M. C. b'., three miles east. of Tillsom burg station, at 3 o'clock this morning, as the result of which twentv big re- frigerator can, heavily loaded with dressed hoof.,nre piled up nt the toot ot a twenty-loot embankment. It is Ive- lieved that the rail: 'yrearl and the train, which was travelling at a fair rate at speed, topplcd over the high embank- ment, carrying the engine nlong. Engin- eer Moreland, of St. Thomas. was tbs ents member of the crew Mute. He was take. to St. Thoma “capital. The wreckage totally Mocks the truck and fills the ditch, und‘vill take all day be. fore it is cloud “val. _ it in golden tt bill u it is THE MONGOLIAN TRAIN FELL OVER. BASEBALL FAN. ' W Divorce. u club-musing to meet to meet the bin collector. 3, Wife Gets The Hay Crop Will be Encoding†Abundant, and Fruit Looks Wall a-ity-ara.", is Butter Than Expmod in Most Localities. FEW DAYS OF FINE WEATHER HAVE WORKED WONDERS. CROPS FAIR“ GOOD Here out; and barley might still be planted, and a fair crop be “cured with good weather conditions, but the general eflect of the belated trading is likely to be that 1909 will see an increase in the acreage of corn, roots and millet sown in Ontario. Guelph deter. There he been so neuron in may your: that has Ibo“ u this opting the advantage of under. dnining of Jun lands, out" Prof. Zaritz, of the experimental department of the Ontario Agricultural College. The exphutntion is that on ground which which has been under-drained the seed has been planted and is coming along well, as on the very light lands, but on the wet, low lamb without drainage even as yet no seeding has been dolle- The seed which is now in the ground is coming along well, and with I fair sn- Ion the crops should be almost up to average exec ting perhaps spring wheat, which will T,',',' a mall Henge. The winter wheat and the you crops are coming along splendidly, and hay pro misses to be heavy. There are large Bee tiom of the heavy, undrnined ground, however, where seed has not been plant- Hluasyet. _ _ . ... ... WELLINGTON AND WATERIDO. In Wellington County conditions are vrtried. In Puslinelx Township the seed. ing came through comparatively well, except on some very low lambs, and the lumen than we looking tor good crops unless the season becomes too dry. The situation is not so {MOI-able in the up- per sections of the county, however, ar though B good deal of seeding has been done in the past few days, and reportl from some parts of lower Water’oo show sections of wet lands where no seed has been planted. SATISFACTION IN THE EAST. BETTER PROSPECTS IN GREY. Owen Sound deepateh: The weather conditions of the past ten days have been very favorable and crops are mak. ing up rapidly for the belated season. Fall wheat is now showing up well in; many sections though on low lands it is still slightly backward. Farmers!†a week later than the average in getting in their spring crops, but if the favor- able weather of the past ten days con- tinuei they are confident no disadvan- tage will follow. Seeding will take a week yet to complete. Clover is show- ing up splendidly, and a good showing " assured, if the preitnt fine weather conditions continue. The reports from all sections confirm this View. HASTINGS WILL NOT SUFFER. Belleville despatch: Despite heavy rains, Hastings county will not suffer much. in it is mostly high land. Farmers an: optimistic. and say if the weather kcepa favorable the crops will be good even if a week or two later. Pasture is excellent, and the high-priced cheese makes up for the deficiency, it any. Plowing and seeding are going on rap- idly the past kw days, and in a week under good weather conditions. which look well at present, all will be satis. factory. BRUCE GOING INTO STOCK. Port Elgin despatch; Though the sea- son has been very backward in Bruce county. the farmers are by no means discouraged with the outlook this year. There seems little doubt that there will he an abundance of hay and parturage. The fall wheat may be a little below the average, but the quantity of wheat grown in Bruce li small in compari- son with other grains, and little is marketed. On heavy clay lands seed. ing, has been greatly retarded be. came of the incessant rains. On the llichter soils seeding has been com. Kingston despetch: Though the sea. son has been backward, the crop condi- tion and outlook in this district we most favorable. Seeding is probably a week or so behind. Hey is expected to yield a very large crop. Little wheat is sown hereabouta. The other grains have ample time to turn out well, There will be more com sown than usual for fodder, as in some districts there will be a scarcity of hay, Farticularly on low lands. On the whole the senon’s out. look is satisfactory. plated, but now the great majority oi tnrmers are more than half finished with sowing. Large quantities oi oats, [was and barley are heing‘sown this spring. which. together with the promising grass crops, mean! that farmers are intending to invest heav- ily in stock. - Considerable alfalfa is ijiiinrsiiG"ihu your, and the results are being awaited with interest. Not a moment is being lost, they bright days by the farmers, and business in the towns is prsctically at a standstill. BRANT LOOKS WELL. “mutton! deepetch: It the ensuing season is favorable the grain yield in Brant county this year will compare favorably with previous years. This is the conceneue of opinion among farmers oi various parts of the country; despite the unfavorable conditions attending' spring seeding. In the eastern section where land is heavy and holds water/ seeding operations have scarcely been started, and the outlook for barley and outs is not good. In the western parts, however, where the land is light, the Inverse is the case, so tar as seeding is concerned, all ot it having been done. Although the season, at best, has been backward, posture is coming along Well, and quite up to the usual standard. Fall wheat in all districts is reported all right, nppeuence be. ing exceptionally good, with excellent prospect. for a fine yield. l CHEERFUL IN PRrERBoRO'. Peterboro deepeteh: The crop condi- tions and outlook in Peterboro' county and vicinity are for more eneottragittg than was to be expected I fortnight‘pr ten days ago. Generally snaking, "cl (lover and fall wheat are excellent, in spite of unfavorable seeding conditions‘ last autumn. The stand in both of these crop is strong and uniform; mew dam hare developed good growth and pasture promises well tor dairy- ing intends. As to seeding. the con- ditionq are not so favorable, but yet not unlmpeiul. Seeding on higher land: and lands properly sttrtaetrdrain. ml last fall and prepared for spring work. is pretty generally eompleted, bui on low-lying or imiserteetVdrttined ground it is somewhat delayed. KENT FARMERS FEEL BETTER. C’lntlnm detrporht Conuquent upon several days of fine weather the crop outlook in this vicinity in and: in- proved. With good weather till til end. of the month, lumen should nah up Mammoth-tun“. Into-claw- lylu wetlan- vbeu had to p plaid $35 'SIMOOE scum FROM IAIN. Dorrie â€in: Wu rah old cold. Maul weather In" W was“ obotrt three weeks in this use: tiou. but yen 1 dry needing all. mhled the farmer: to and quickly. but operation: this year wen anti-u- olly interrupted " rain. On the high ground former. hare finished, but on the low, heavy land may have not yet started. Dry wenther the last few ders has had good effects, and half a dolor: dart more should see seeding mm- pleted. Usually there is little growth in spring groin: before May 24, and warm weather muting now should soil in smelt favorable condition. Full wheat acreage is not as great as int year, owing to the very dry weather making a "onuderable perr'entnge of the crop a failure. That which started well in the fall winterM splendidly, and on high, loamy land especially the prospects were never better. Low lands will aver- age, half a crop. Clover is exceptionally soon make up for lost time with the fine this your, ttnd has a. large acreage, n failure in the WM crop being followed by a big seeding but year. Timothy is in good shnpe nod should crop heavily. Timothy and clover are big fat-tors with Simone, county lumen. Pttuurage in about two weeks later than a year ago. FARM WORK DELAYED. Windsor despatch: Crop reports from North and South Essex agree that er evasive rains have dvlnyt-d farm work considerably. Spring plowing in North Exam is three works late in some town- ships. While early yet to make definite predictions, indication: point to " least an avenge spring wheat yield; out: and com a trifle less than last you. In South Esau less acreage will be de. voted to tobacco and more to wheat. Fruit promises well; no damage is IP- ported to peach trees anywhere. The season is generally backward here u in other parts of western Ontario. Dry weather from now on will mean that farmers will devote more attention to under as] my“, but tttW, wheat look- good. Out: and rley umtttred comidcnbly. _ cultivation English Archdeacon Wall " the London, May 24.-L"ushop Thick- nesw, Archdeacon of Northampton, loundly denounce; what he terutg "the degradation of the Sabbath by people in anxiety." in an address ko the clergy to-day. "What we have to deal with now," he saiu, "is the open disregard of the worship of the Almighty God by persons in the higher walks of life, their selfish prolanities of the day of public worship by needless journeys, motor expeditions, dinner parties and games, to the utter deprivation also of the Sunday rm and quiet needed by their ill-used servant: and dependents. I know as a faet of a large fancy dress dinner party held on the first Sunday of Lent at a country house in the. neigh- boring county, where tio-trailed ladies shmnelessly appeared dressed as mm and sn-enlled gentlemen tlgesqed as ww- men. I mention it with y‘OI'nund shame. sorrow and indignation. I am almout ready to diaown the name 'gentleman,' for mm with more money than mnnners, with more. pretence than pedigree, have brought it to this and dragged it in the mire of their own corrupt habita." Hamid Hunter Shot Himself While Hunting. Kingston, Ont., despatch: Harold Hun. ter, the 12-year-old son of Capt. Hunter, oi the dredge schooner Richnrd, is a mueh mutilated hay. Thtw month, ago, while coasting down Bay street hill, he mu under the wheels of in street car and had hie right nrm out off at the shunt der. Ho lvft the Hotel Dion a few days turd. and is now haul; in the some insti- tution with a bullet wound in his left kg. Yesterday after having tho stump of his arm dressed at the hospital. he started out nun shooting expedition with four chums, the party taking two revolvers along. On their return jour- ney, young Hunter accidentally fired his weapon into his left leg. the bullet mak- ing a clean hole through the flesh. At first he said he had been shot by some unknown person, but later admitted he did it himself. Camus Think It Is Putting Britain in u Ridiculous Light. is putting the English in a ridicillous and humiliating light here. At the same time the aerial goblin turnishes some serious newspapers with material for grave protests against the apparently imitless rowth of anti-German suspi- cion, of which the airship forms only on: manifestation. Berlin, May 24.--The airship scare in England, although it is, in some of its aspects, flattering to German enterprise, is putting the English in a ridiculous Friedrich Deruburg, father of the Col- onial Secretary, advocates an entvnte with Great Britain in a long article in the Tagelrlatt. Me points out the danger of such delusions carrying the nation off its feet, developing an explosive inch dent, and forcing the Government into 8 war before the unnu- part of the com. munity is able to exert its influenct'. loss-nth Mord Burglar. Gaston-gun. . Bruntlord. Ont., despatch: The ease of Joe Smith, the burglar who was arrested a week ago for committing seven bar. glaries in one night, was Imytg'at up tt, guinea In one my“, nus nun-5... up n. the Police Court this morning, and he was sentenced to seven years " King- ston Penitentiary. Smith is supposed to be a fictitious name. Me " a French- Canadian, and it is supposed he has “mind his when": all the way up the country. Burglaries having been mm- mitted in London, Hamilton and other places much like Smith's plam.’ it is thong)". he is the man who. has been committing these trumhtries. ther-Ar many men nowadays marry for money. You wouldn't may use for my, mid you, donut?" Ho (ab. "nur-tro, darting, I wouldn't many you for all the none: in the world. She --m. you mm. horrid ,rretehr."-. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO GOT SEVEN YEARS BELL AND BOOK. Wealthy Sabbath-Breaker. BADLY COT UP. AIRSHIP GOBLIN. hold", my M.--The. Dean of We‘d-star, when decide- is final in the letter ot burial: in West.“- ete: Abbey, declines to give his tee- Iou for ref-ting to snow the ashe- of George Iendith, the author. to he interred there. The decision has greatly dingpointed literary men and a large xenon of the public. when diatratisfaetitttt in gndorned by none of the newspapers. The Dean'. "use! is much speculated upon by certain ecclesiastics. Although they are not admitted to the Dean's confidence, they say that the public recognition of Meredith's genius is not sufficient- ly convincing to justify the honor of burial in the Abbey. Moreover, the noveliet'e attitude toward: marriage, as reneeted in " writings have influ- enced the Dean‘s decision. it may be TOG" In... Why W's Aha-aki'm. [minted out in connection with the utter migration that it is hardly coll- patible with the fact that the “can nan not only agreed to the holding of a memorial non-ice in the Abbey, but will himael! conduct it. The ashe- of the author will be buried in the family plot at Barking. Gipsy Smith Tolls of Turning-â€iv“ In Prouhor's LW-N. Time to Preach About New Tttwow-tro Busy With the Old, Which is Accomplishing Things. CHRIST HAS THE POWER TO TRANSFIGURE WHOLE LIFE. Toronto dospatch: How can a man’s soul be trnndignred? (lips; Smith at Massey Hall yesterday took his text from that wonderful tevelation which St. Lake descrihel. nnd which in known as the tramttigttmtlott. Bo to the human soul, he pointed out, we. it possible to come a slmilnrly wonderful change out revelation. To illustrate his meaning he told with pathos A story of Dr. C. A. Berry, the grant Englinh divine who“ name is honored throughout the black country, the district in south Stafford. shire teeming with iron foundries, col- lieries nnd great factories, and which has been described by a writer, after pauing through at night and wing the flames rushing and dashing from forges, as the epitome of the inferno. Dr. Berry was speaking to a fellow- minister. He told him how, on leaving college, he had intended to follow some- thing of a new theology. . __ ... .. ..,.AVV_D#“L nuns .u. - ..-.. "Wu-..†_ “It's astoninhing,†aid Gipey Smith, breaking in on his story, “how young fellows leaving college, stroking their upper lips-feeling for the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of thing- not 'teen-IN ready to set creetion right." Then he told how late one night there came a knock at Dr. Berry" door. He opened and there woe n factory [use with her shawl over her head. "I wont you to get my mother in." He thought that the mother was in a drunken brawl, and replied, “You hod better get B policemen." Then came the deep nppenl to Dr. Berry, “You're a preacher, Ain’t you? My mother's dying and I want you to get her into heaven." Those who knew Dr. Berry in his later years could hardly appreciate how he at that time haunted. " wondered what people would think of me walking through the street at midnight with a girl like this." Still the appeal was too strong and he went. "When I got there." said Dr. Berry, relating his story, " found it was s house of shame. The old mother lay dying, while in rooms round her were men (kinking sud sunning. I tried to talk to her of the ethical Christ. With her bloodshed: eyes fixed she turned away with ‘Thst's no good to me. I don't want on onupk. My lilo lu" gone. I want something to hope for'; and, Jove", I hadn't I Gospel. Like a drowning mm snitch- ing at a straw I looped back to the story I had heard " my mother's knee. I told her of how Christ had died on Calvary for sinners. out! she said, "I'hot'o Whlt I wont] and, Jorr. ett. I got her in and I got nay-ell in at the some time. I've got 3 Gospel now." “So. when Christ comes into your heart," said Giply Smith, "you will be trtuufitrured. "There wu n time," he proceeded, "in your experience when you used to uy, 'Praise the Lord! Now you look thunder at anyone who 5â€- it bee-use you’ve trot estubliuhod- in I rut. We couldn't get I hearty 'Pniu the Lord' out of you with I wringing maehine. Now you wnnt a quartetto to any 'amen' for you. I tell you we have got to get back to the natal-:1 Why of praising the Lord. You can't page Him with machining. , "ii'iirirAve open. uni! clone- over those we hold dear, but Jesus never (oi-aka. "Some of you are crying out for u now Bible, a new Gospel, . new Church, to get rid of some of your dogma. Did it ever occur to you that you should get rid of your blind. is“? "Someone who nag me up on the telephone asked, 'When are you go- in. to preech on the new theology? I aid I we: too busy with the old, which was doing thinge. It'e the old theology that rtited this hell for two weeks. Noth. ing clue would hue do? it. ual last night hundreds were turned “my from the hall. while in- side every enihble spot we: occn ied, one or two even crowding in kind the free of the organ. Again the e"ntre in appealed with all his power to the people that they should eur- render theneelvel to Christ. It in theirs to chooee, but they could not be good unless they gun the outer that God denuded to His queetion. Every- thing that vu noble and good centered in June. 'at you are than“; Him out of your program." he sold. “on on 2','g"l,t,tl,'E intellectual, moral and pay- eical mic" .†A _ - _ ml? arai the profession " the Christian faith, hit its practice that In. my. - A -- "Have you ever won o ‘God bless you’ from pale lips in this city?" he queried. "Hove you taught. grief to ting? You can only do “It to you how Jesus Christ. Some of you will die with Mt you fd,' old dash, and " your wealth on equip-pa and be forgotten. 1nd God, will "in on you coffin u it is carried out of the iato sanity, (our Uttem --4.o<st. Yet them in no. dou- old you, living in I human“... and the people A MMG SOUL. .tt-dgotoueroeb-dieeimrbe. caught-ovum "The world wan to nab. the an aa.lttio..imnrhosrttt (init- new nautic- loc tim gin-ta. Mud was not over [ll-vole. PM two 1tie.aptirestrueasdauoot'. You huh! A soil that will live 'or cur-icy phyi with 1 Ut cl tiring. all will; i't"'fa"u'ld'.; Don’t you In iow 'haliow, MM. all earthly you have been " to beau-e? "This git-dial: 'What will you do with Jenn?“ will nettle your chum:- ter, and your future tor eternity. "If you can do without Hi. go “I! Create a new plat-t and live on it. but don't say you cu do without Rim so long " you and on an earth." Paris, May N.--Hfteen HIM workmen at all trade: took “an": of the general mutation of work on Aim-mien Day to Inernble at M. Pant" Riding School ml pretended they were strikers. Alter thoroughly enjoying themselves by abusing capitar ism and Partiaatetttttriattiot, tuey went out in a rather exuberant traute or mun, to fitul a large body of police waiting Defun- Ilie hall with instruction“ to nee that the men disperruul quietly. run, under the oireuuetttmNs, the “my makers declined to do, null a melee HI 'uted, in the murm- ol Maid: nutty Vere beaten, trampled. Ind hit with miuil-su. The police Buttered severely. Several hundred nu'tjen took pomuion of a cafe in Hue St. Antoine and {origin the police with chairs, iron tables, cumin-u and ayplwm, inflicting some helium in. juries. ttanrqheh-haredin1uids, Mali-Paris. A reserve company of the municipal gunrds were called out and mum: down the street» with bayoneta. The guard: succeedn-d in dispeming the rioterl, who, however, repaired to the Cafe den Mousquetairor. and began to [unmade themnelvmi. A troop of un- ttlry, which was hurried to the scene, and charged at a gallop, finally disperse ed the mob. A hundred urn-stat Ware made, while many person, more or has wounded, wrro allowed to go home. The nllair must not be regarded u setimts. being rather It holiday fracas than a de- liberate manifestation of disorder. His Constituency Failed to See It and He Apologia. . London. May 24.-ln a recent Poli. tical speech the Ball of llonnldnhuy. who repreients the llornsey Jinan)" of Middlesex in the lion-e of Com. mom, gibed the ll-t'liuh of his constit- uency in connection ttith n lunar in. augurated by the (‘ounleu ot Grand. He referred to her as " dumped Amer. ican heiress who bad been fortunate enough to secure a tisle." it mm; that he has since realized that he said Nun‘- thing impolite. In a speech to.night he apologized, saying he had mu.- the remark jocularly. He had not meant it seriously or an a slight to the hulv, Nevertheless he regretted it extremely. Denver, Colo., May M.-- The Gener. al Assembly ot the Presbyterian Church met " 9 o'clock this morning and before adjourning at noon the organization of the actual business at the ehateh executive body was well under way. U. S. Presbrterio Church Cele- brate His Anniversary. Dr. William Henry Roberta, of Philadelphia, Mats reelected stated clerk. a position he hug held for 26 years, and Judge Charles 5. Holt, ot Chicago, was tippointed vim moder- ator. 7 7 “The four hundredth anniversary of the birth of John Calvin will be cele- bete4 this p. m. .. . . "iifiiiouii, "irrditarationtr have been made to make the gvent noteworthy. Lisbon, May 24.-A serious accident occurred today in the church belong- ing to n monutery he" this city. Dur- ing service A gallery containing 200 persona collnpood and fell upon I crowded congre‘ntion beneath. A potie followed. Seven bodies hare, been ex- tricated from the ruins. Thirty-five per-on. received notion injuries and so were [cu badly lint. Tragedy Dating Service in a Peru â€our Cycling Accident at "up“ Falls Driving Park. Niagara Full» despitch: Fred Otter. Ion of ex-Mayor Carter, had his jaw- bone broken, and Jack Symuu unwind I sprained. ankle in n motor driving mi- dent at the Driving Park Inn chilling. The two, with not " null. An iii-expen- eneed motor cycle rider, were trying a new machine. The third man wm pedal- ing about the track without his engine going. Speculum warned Synge» to look out tor him Winn; rounding 1 nine, Ind the rider slowed down. Carur did not. receive the warning in sufficient. time and crashed into Symnvu at full _ speed. - - - Dr. Workmm'n Quit Apia“ - (>in by Mutual Nahum. Montreal, my 24.--.The proceeding- of the Montreal" sitthodirt District meeting to-dny were enlivened in a disguuion which "one com-owing the matron: " existing between the Rev. Dr. Worknnn Ind the authorities of the wesievan Theologiral Collect, running in . Raw- suit. A ruclution w“ atrial unani- mously: "That with a view to “min I satisfactory teratinatiort at the quntniu " int". out ot mun. the (-hllrnmn appoint I committee to do what i: "an undo! the eiremmrtttrtees." " - "Dr. Workman promised nwmwhlia (1 hire the legal proeeeditW in ab'.sove. “I have three lunhnds to support," pleaded the rigged luau woman. "wut-you us n “paint t" “Na, Ur. One husband's - Ind tho 09:". he: long to Lender. FOUGHT POLICE. AN EARL’S JOKE. GALLERY FELL JOHN CALVIN. JAW EON E BROKEN. WANT IT SETTLED. 'tirirditairA."-mrve'.and “emf-Putin"! Montreal, In: “.4. u H today, Mr. G. w. sauna. and of the Harbor W. - View: on the Cover-env- M Umi on both “do: ot the rim. yirtorin We to Boat de rue. ' day.†an In Stephan. “vh- i mau is a and smut city a.‘ now, the min:- at! In†a I. l an immonu “not thie I'll be (I port, and Ire 'ttt be my M that Parliament has in“ mouth to pu- the not that in broome law. TRIED TO SHOOT. km 0., iaiL J I. "The position - is thin: M the ningle exception of Sn Montreal in the only port cl the American mntimt when the foreshore belongs to the in vested in control ot I ' don. That in (on; to In "a. hundreds of “was“ at dolla- city, Muse now then - ho opportunity tor the null-ital mom of the harbor “that . ventrd interest having to be M between here and Bout do Piate, l tuner ot about twain miles." "Not in Hue least," he replied. " property and thr property ut " ti uide owners only extend: to the t water lurk, and everywhere he] that line the lumhore halo-(l to Governmt. Ind in now In“! tte trol of the "£er Col-hum." “But what about the "an by the ('. P. It. of rivers“. Langm- Potato!" Mr. Stephen- nut od. "Will not that new tutuu‘ pliratimutt" _ . _ .. _ - Trouble originated . week up) I1 Walton, who is monitor oi his cl stood out of line for tutu-(ion. I hard ftir mulled all in the tt Jane- tri to choke Walton. Wal [rubbed a baseball bat all N Juneu' nun. June- trad uppuutly t planning our nine to got even. I yesterday neared a old "velvet laid for Wuhan this morning. The lice have the cue in had, but I. mat has yet been nude. London. (hm. deapatrh Dining liq Day celrbrnliom at King “not ad this morning Clinton "trters, god " libentely tried to shoot his It!!!“ class lute, Clifton! Wilton, an the head, while the celebration In progress. Jones stepped up to Wet and during a revolver from NI pa placed it u, Walton'c head aard pi the nigger. Wilton put up M. h and in so doing trpoilrd Jun-1' ah the bullet W'ettt wild. Bo done In gun. however, that Walton's chin ie 1 ly burned. tie it buffering eomidrm from shock. GOLD OUTPUT. m: of N... Fin. m Stank, Wtoh., In: M.--h'-U ' output this year will be apron-I $5,000,000, according to u out. made by Jute! â€WM 000 a! piotteer' of the Name ditttict, who N Seattle. Mr. Limienbuttr say- that it in p Mo to nuke . “My mute foe, this early in the MI. IIW clean-up of the boxes will not be t until About the first of July. Th. output this yur will be little, ll grater than that of luv. you. Fume to be the Ruth Iowa in the Wall. Paris, Many 24.--The Superior (31 of the savy he decided upon I‘ gramme that includes Imaging the 1 her of French battluhipl up to I total that would ptNure France (on place among llu null pawn o! l world. It in proposed to tay to“ I910 two 21,000 ton vesqel' ot u .III ed Danton type. The arm-ell law yet been decided upon, but the - in in favor of twelve lunch “a h turn", those m to be W The naval artillery experts, I." Inn-e brought forward amuse-u I. var ot the sixteen 1o.trineh gnu Cu 01 turret; Detroit, mm, May 24..- WM belonging to the slot-er WIN lotto-I April Mt, bu he. tetgnd miles out of linking by I m liming tug. It eerutisted at†the deck, :9 feet quit}, 0;.†- Al tt can! And " our, the I.“ U. the name "Adelia Shoul." II the ( wn a man'- un'w- and, Ink to Patrolâ€; AtsoteudbV through the deck, and the on I througt it. It in tbmgbt M I used than menu-tilt.“ finally been “M “I in. the - Seve. Perk band It. “has“ Quebec thipllch: A Rm I“ here this nfu-rnoou tro- w. A. Month, some MO Illa out " M1 nun ttsat I [any ol about .4 people. who I'm rear-inc In. - um upset white (M the an, out ot'ttremsrirohUrrtta-r mildly! were and, the I.†U drown-d. So far only thee â€I hot-n 'eeovered, those at In. I nun. widow; Mrs. Gen-in, St. “a a um. "tttttttar a 1aeee human. The an. o! thd “tribunal to the - _ but. The up. ot than M (u obtain-No and who» hob- a menu-ed In: Mr. W lltqat "an". Sigurd. p, In“: 1 St. but? at Ilium-M WAS 0N ADELIA. FRENCH NAVY. MET DEATH.