H 13‘ V21 In. of “and people continue in the Inn of worldiu- and sin. 32. Spa. Into Ai-au, poteeeded to “fold to him tho that will "upset to Chm Bed Ilia ninth. ,,._ -- --_ w w-wIc III - s... has. No one en believe for oth. en. and yet the inmteaseses of I Chriuian boa. nth Christina. Ninety per cent. of the children of Christian people be. ron. Christina. and on the other land In -ttt In". par out of the ehil. A-, _. - A no" in ptinouers he now rooming as " lords. What Inst 1 ar-The queuion In an“: and Inc naked with the full expectation: of following the diree. tion which might be given. at. B.li.ve. ou.-.-') Jesus Christ no you Saviour. Ila-ohm every sin and mahe a lull urn-dot of yourself to Bin. This VII unquestionably implied in Pur- aunt. All thy home --mu hm would be led to believe in the - .-, -, - __ W - v~.»‘ . .lll "rIe-. “S'rango for a prinoner to be solicitom about his keeper] But Pant was passion ateiy trying to save men. and the whole [our] is an appeal to men to do them. selves no harm." 29. Called for a littht--Which could be carded in the hand. This can for his woifare bog-t a tenderness in the heart of the keeper. It was the. arrow of conviction which had reached his soul. Came trttrtbluttt--He trembled be- cause of his nins. A moment before, he won rudy to destroy his life. to escape the wnth of In, but now he was eager to find the way of life, to escape the wtath of God. Fell f.o--rrevorGsti, re- cognixin. tho apostle: as the ministers of God. who had "strained his micidnl hand. He had doubtless heard Pan] punch about Jon. and Bio power to an. at. Dwight than "rf-Prom the inner when into his own glint-outs. huh. no fear that they would up. bet rather eoav'meed that God wu‘ own-ling all thing: foe the. teim-"gh. Ouch word i-plin " ukuwlodg-ent l lye â€unity." Thou who ha IV. The jailer converted (vs. 27.34). .‘7. Awakittr--T'he praying and singing Cid not arrtske him, but the earthquake did. He evidently slept in {all View of the prison doors, Drew out his orord-- Tho Itoman law transferred to the jaihtr the punishment due to an escaped prist- 'tter.--ttiddle. QImposing the prisoner» had etreaped, he decided at once to take hi: own life and than avoid a worse tau. 28. Paul 1rrief-a.nticirtauusr the jatleru fear. Paul raised his voice to no". attention at once. All L..._ - Aw". " we " not ready to please God where we are, and with our condi- tions and circumstances as they are, we should not be likely to praise him if we were differently eiretunstaneea and our rumdition was just that which now My; to us mol desirable. Daniel would sleep better in the den of lions than lurius in the royal palace. " is the man himself that must be changed and not his circumstances, in order that he may have a heart overflowing with joy and praue.-Trttutbttll. The prison- ers heard-io" meant this midnight song not merely for the sullenrs' joy. hm for the prisoners‘ hearing." 26. A great oartt+take--'Tht" did God anewer prayer and prove his presence and protection. No doubt all Philippi heard the sound and felt the force of the earthquake. Foundations. .shaken--. As God shook the lonndations of that old prison no he is still nblo to shake the foundations of every power or Utflttrnee arrayed against " truth have no fear of infidelity or “he religions. Jehovah lives and reigns. Doors were opened, etr.--.'rhe chains were made fast to the tall, and the shock which burst asunder the bolts of the doors also released the last-ling: which held the chains in the ""onry.--Cam. Bib. A symbol of the spiritual deliverance they were to effect tor the heathen (Isa. 42. "0.--Binnev. Every deliverance hears a certain a se-blaaoe to the final deliverance. God hreahs the chains of sin when the soul , ls regenerated. He bursts the prison of '; the grave when the hode is redeemed. ~Lange. . 1 IV. The iailer mun-nu! In Mns\ _ III. A great deliverance In. 25, N.) Pn. Pnyml. and sang praises-Their wound. Were, undressed: filth and wr- min M to tho-it pain; their position In. - of torture. Sleep wan out of themion. They passed the night in dew s. " ii a significant fact that the - joyoun of Paul's Ppiitlt‘i is that qrMtten to the churn-h at Philippi, My. 0-. ot his experience of suffering. o-tary.--'. AI evil epirit not out in lots.) The main-rice node their bone at the house at Lydia (no V. tst while the, continued to preach the rtstret " Philippi. They had good memo, and in this city the timt Christ. la- rhurch in Europe war landed. not their (not victorie- did not cone with. out great apparition. There war in the city a certain dn-ael who was a fortune, teller, who brought her meters grant [him Thh shire girl followed the min- eioaaries and died alter their. Paul was grieved More" of this and com- manded the evil spirit to come out all her. “And he came out the some hour" lv. Is.) Why was Paul grieved'. "t. lt- eame her presence was troublesome to him. 2. Because it might appear that he win in ultiance with her. it. Because what the did we: for gain and we: a tune impo-ition. 4. Bernme her state wn one of bondage oui.delusiott. G. lieu-aims the system under which she in“ twetirtg was then holding a large part of the pagnn world in bond:ge." n. Paul and Silt" arrested and itrrprV owned (in. MFN.) After the evil spirit had left the girl she no longer had pow- er to make money for her masters by fortune-telling. This made her masters angry. nod they "riated Paul and Silas and dragged them before the magis- trates into the market-place, where legal business win "amt-ted. "It wan dim- c-uli to frame a i-harge against than. Had a pig been stolen trom than there wan n In: in their behalf, but there was Lo compensation for a lost demon."-- \\'hedon. "The Phillirqrian magistrate: were excited agaimt the mi-aiunuriH by the awn-satin» that they had attacked the religion oi Rome." An excited mob row up. violently tore the olotlte all of the tiiiuionlrim. and beat them "with hula" [2 Cor. II; in The Roman NH- tom win to inflict Mom on the naked body, and the puni-hment wad not lim. ited to "forty etripes are one," like I that of the Jews Then all 4ore and I Weeding they were thruet into the "in- I ner prison." a dungeon, probably under- ground. and their feet wertumade fast “in the stocks." The tstoekq eonlrxted , of a heavy piece ol wood, with holes in ', to which the feet were put, it) far apart I as to dixtrnd the limbs in a most pain- I lul manner. What a trying ordeal this l we» through which thew thithlnl mis. I nannies were phoning! But they are in t Philippi by special din-Minn of the l Holy Spirit and they need have no lean regarding reuiilu. God will work ', out tell tbtnttn to his glory and the good t of his children. . The Philippian "Nr-Acts w. LEMON ".-,tULY H, mt. for a litrht--Which could u the hand. This can for berttt 3 tenderness in the keeper. It was the arrow l which had reached his once. - All here.- 'r to be wlicitom Paul was puden- Pn, and the whole men to do them. --ev --..-. w -a'a', a - be In“ they 93;. out " niAn Hi. Aatle-rre told D. I, m were like Atm. liq Caution ---Ah, I u - -"e .., -. vvrlc unnuuucx‘u 1mm by Capt. Birdwhhtlv. A W'W time limit for wanting in provided. The time limit in which each competi- tor mutt fire at dint has been placed nt 40 m'eemuN instead of one minuce ibm heretotore in order to provide mote rapid firing. In some of the man-lbw new targets. colored in as to represent natural surroundings. such as grave, tIre to be used. .There will be a match for whoa] cadets for teams and for individual-o. Team: of outlet: must be 16 you" of age or Mahmud the agelimit for individual cadets ii 18 years. _ Former President Eliot, of Flu-nu], Inn been appointed presidmtt-emerittu.' He will got. r salary and I present of halt I million dollar; Ottawa. July 5.--A number of im, portant changes in the conditions for the Dominion Ritle Association compe- tition " the Rockliffe Rifle Ranges from August 23 to 28 were nmmunca'd “ML... 1... rt-_. '.. . __ ’ speeding Up the l Prince Aglrert, Sank" July ".--- ‘Prmpwtors who have been 'sttraeted inn; the north by reports of gold and e"pper di-wovrrim at Lae La Range and other places in the wilds are re. turn.ng with wry rich samples of other mum-rah whinh they have uncovered. The latest to come in is ll. Parkimrom who brings a fine sample "f pvtrolemn and awplmlt whioh he discovered at, But. talo Lake, 22.3 miles northwest of here and in the wine locality of strata as the famous asphalt and petroleum beds of UK Athabasca River. 1 Saskatchewan’s Hinterland is Ito. ported to be Very Rich. FULL or MINERALS. ' UN with wrnpum and stones. In one of thew irvuanos we were driven at night- l fall into a filty vrtelosure, open to the falling rain and exposed to keen winds from the snows of the Atlas Mountains. We preached Christ to a group that gathered. and one took m into his own house, turning a cult and donkey out to make room. He gave us food and said, 'Tell me again those precious words you spoke.' We thought of Paul and SUM cared for by the jailer at Philippi." The sinner saved by grace " anxious to serve. A. C. M. (John H: 1dl). W. Salvation. "He ..... . was bap- tized" tv. 33). Knowledge of danger is not deliverance; remorse is not repent- nnu-z conviction is not conversion; sub- mission is not salvation; earnestness is not enlightenment. Agony, repentance, convietion, earnest prayer will not save us. Faith is the instrument that “Vet Christ is the Saviour. He “was once offered to bear the sins of many" (Heb. '.r.. 28p. tie nude peace with God (Eph. 1: H). He is the way opened to God (John H: ti). We believe it. Faith doom not change God and make him gra- ciously do something to save us, hut faith apprehends what his grace has done and accepts it. Faith is not beg- ging God; it is believing Christ has died and that Hod will save, and then that God has saved. A little girl fell into a cistern. and her mother hastened to the generic. The child, explaining how she. wan saved. said. "i reached up as far an ever I hold, and mother did the rut." Faith is the hand stretched out to him who inn-s to the uttermost. V. Service. “Washed their stripes" (v. 33). Works do not induce faith, but faith protlnu-a works. A missionary in Mom-co wrote: "tmee we were taken by a soldier before a governor, who ordered u.', taken to llusha. but We escaped and fled from the city at sonnet, sleeping on the Cobble stones paving the entrance to an u-nrlmed village. Twice we were detained by wicked men. who threatened lid with wenpom and stones. In one of IF ll. Dehveranee. "that earthquake" (r. 2m. "Walls and ohains are nothing uguiiht Hml’d power. Upprwuiun. p97- "rty. tentptation, sieknetsi, gurruw, 'vhatever hold" hut a ohikl of God, dist Amman when ' od speaks The dUeiple ul’ Christ "my yxpu-t deliverance from trial :u well Hi strength in trial." ‘ Ill. Speaking? "They spoke unto him the word of this Lord" (v. M). We should know how to point sinners to the Saviour. how to sud', them that "the lard hath laid on hun the iniquity of us all" that. 53; 5). Tell them he "bare ullr sins in him own body on the tree" (I Peter 2: 24), that we might mover ille- (John 8: Gl, 52; ll: 26). Tell them he that believeth "hath eternal life and cometh not into judgment" John 5: 24, R. V.) Tell them the blood of Jesus thruU vlranswth from all sin.“ John l.. 7, 9); that he ever liveth to inter. cede for us (Hel). 7: 25); that he is, coming again to receive us to himself‘ (Jhlln H: L3). "felt a"heaven of jhy while in a tr,if of pain." ll. Dehveramse. "(Heat earthquake" ,mging hymns" (v. 25. R. V.). They muhl not idea-p. out tiny (Maid si . With feet last in the stm-ki. with ci',',,',' 3mg humans from drip“. down in a horrible dungeon, dump with undried walls. claw with putrid air. tom trom filth, and black With darkness, these .m-n of God could. like one of the old mupho-u. pray and give thanks as "tttore. tinte" when the way wan undondnd IUMI. 6. lor. Trials received from u Futher'.-, hand (John M, II) are some- thing "given" (Phil. I, S'.S); s,uteh are "preeiouC' (I. Pet. i, 7). and would be chariots in which to mount to victory. Fox, in his Book ot Martyrs, tells of more joy in Bonneru coal-hole and in the Lollurd's tower than ever was known in the palaee of any king. The martyrs MUST SHOOT QUICKLY. ant joy." T. Paul and Rim released trr. 35-40), M. Rent the serjeaettm--The magi-true; evidently were troubled bee-use oi their wieked, unlawful deeds and dashed to be rid of their primnvrs. The serjunh answered to uherilh or eonqtables. Lit. wally the word means “rod-beanrs.†l hey were probably the ones who had summed Paul and Silas on the were} ing day. 37. Paul mid-Paul refused to 'go in this manner. It was mortuary tor the good of the work that they In publicly exonerated. Paul made tour 'lrtive chug" against thnn, They had tll Ina-ten them, (2p publicly. (3) uncan- ‘lrmnml. H) and (an: them into prison. living Ilomarrs -The Roman lawn made it a mime to "uturge a Roman oftizvn. ( " Washed their stripe-He tho-ed ‘his love to Christ and to them by pet- forming this art of mercy. Was My tized---BFrn is "an outward sign of an inward work.' Even in this can tho faith which led to an inward regenera- tion pm-aled the outward sign. .in be- lieving on Christ under such circum- stum-s there was little danger of h po- crisy or iselrdeception. 34. Brought Mit up (R. v.)--Tlre house was abnve the prison. RejoGl--"Rejoieed greatly."-- It. V. The Greek word signifies "exalt. PP. . the Competitors at D, ‘. A. Matches. Si'Tlf'Ar, A PPLiCATI0N,s', a “not ha, been plan-ed I instead of one minuce I order to provide more In NO0tt' of the tnatelw, hrred RO ad to represent mdings. such " gran. Paul and Sit“ f Ottawa despatch: At a meeting of "eprxmentatives of all the Anglican Churches of the city last night Jt was decided that hereafter all Chinese in the local Anglican Sunday Schools shall be taught by men intend of by lady teacher; The decidon in in a large men-nu the outcome of the recent at- rocity in New York in connection with the mnrder of Xian Bigeh There in a conniderable Chineao pornlation in ot. tawa and in a number o Sunday Ichaola there are regular Chinese clam tan“ by you. India. V -"--- .-,-... Ftnvrw “In“! the whole-ale trade. basins" appear: to be on the Quint aide, “though Indication: point to improvement. were “my winriipU%iusiness, cont] nearly Pfreat ly, volume, Montreal-Business there continues to thaw Mendy it somewhat modest Improvement. Wholesalers generally report an More.“ In the volume ot order: and some improvement lu collections. Warm weather during the past week ha. much helped the drygood: trlde. Toroato-The wunn weather of tho put week bu alven a decided stlmuluu to general trade and the" urn nuthorltlu here who state that the buslneu revival whlch the general outlook has named to foreshadow ls now It hand. Farnham, Que.-- At the Farnham cheese board meeting yesterday 14 tae, tories offered 507 boxes butter; all sold at 22 Idk-, fire buyers prgsent. snwsmars' TREE-REVIEW Him "tttpbellford, ont.--1.2 registered; 1,140 sold at ance unsold. Stirling, ()nt.~This afternoon there were 920 boarded, 250 sold at 11 7-160; balance at 11 3-80. Wheat-July $1.33 1-4 bid, October $t.lt bid. BRITISH CATTLE MARKETS. London-London cables for cattle are firm, at 14%c to 16e per lb., for Can. adian steers, dressed weight; refrigera- tor beef is quoted at 10%c to lie per pound. Hogrr.--neauas report an easier mar- ket, with prices lower: selects, fed Ind watered. at the market, " and $7.- 75, f.o.b., cars at country points. Sheep and lambir.--Pitteen hundred sheep and lambs, ware on sale. Export ewes sold at $3.50 to $4 per cwt.; rams, $2.50 to $3 per out; lambs, " to 87.75 per oset., with a few selected lots at " per cwt. Veal mu"ves-kapits, moderate; trade steady, at 83 to $6 per cwt., with a few enga quality at $6.50. MEN TO TEAci-c crtirtsse. smokers and Peedtrs.-rrrarry Murby reports moderate trade, having buoght 225 cattle during the week. Mr. Murby reports average prices at follows: Steers. 900 to 1,000 lbs. each, at " to $4.50 per cwt.; steers. 700 to 800 lbs. each, at 83.- 26 to 83.75; smokers, 400 to 700 lbs. each, at 3.; to 83.50; selected lots bryught 25e per owt, higher than above prices. 'Milkers and sqprintrers.--Between 40 and GO milkers and springer-s were on sale. There was a fair trade, one eas- tern buyer taking two car loads. Prices ranged from $35 to 855 each, one choice cuw selling at $62. P1te)rrs.--oeorire Rowntree bought 500 cattle for the Harris Abattoir Co. Mr. Rowntree's nprotatiatc, ‘were: Ex- porteis, Qua) to 86.25; butchers' steer: and heifers, " to 85.62%; cows, 82.50 to $4.85; bulls, " to 86.40. ta'xporteri.-9iot"iat"y Tii, ( Prices ranged from 85.80 to 86.26 84.75 to $5.40. The quality of fat cattle was fair to good. Stall-fed cattle sold readily at steady prices, but grass cattle were a little easier and slower sale. Receipts of live stock, reported by the railways, were 124 car loads, consisting of 1,549 cattle, 2,975 hogs, 1.502 sheep and lambs and 262 calves, for Wednes- day and Thursday. THE FRUIT MARKET . Receipts of fruit and vegetables we" large today, and prices generally heavy. Quotations as follows: l Bananas, per hunch ....8 1 GO ' 2 00 Sirawirerriem.. .... .... 00t 007 Goowlmrrim, Inwket ... l 25 I GO Chrrries Maker. ... .... l 00 l GO "range, navel .. ... N 3 00 3 2.1 Iamonn.. ...... ...... 2M 350 Pineapple-s. crate .... .. 2 00 2 GO PeaeheA, Cal., box .. .. l " 2 00 Apriooti. box .. .. .F.. I 75 g 00 Wotermelom, . . . . . . . . . 0 30 o M Cabbage, crate .. .. . . .. l GO I 75 Tomatoes, 4-hkt. crate .. l 10 0 00 Onions Bermuda, erate.. 1 00 0 00 i'tteuttsberz, per hamper.. l 25 0 00 Lettuce', ptr dozen .. .. 0 bi " 00 AFparagus, dor.. hum-hm 0 75 I M Potatoes, new. Md. ... .. 2 GO 4 00 Rhubarb, dozen .. .. .. 0 20 " 00 flantalottpes. muse .. .... 5 GO o M Do., ymrh‘nga, ll). . Fowl, lb. .. .... ... Celery. per dozer, ... Potatoes. hog .. .... Onions, bat.. .... .. KHAN. barrel . .. ... Beef, hindqmtrte ... Do., forepartprs .. Do., choice, carcass Do., medium, arcane Mutton, per ewt. .. .. Veal. prime, per ewt. Lamb, per cwt. .... .. WINXIPEG WHEAT MARKET, Do., interior . Eggs, dam ... . Chickena. broilers Do... No. 2 . StFaw, per ton Dro-d hogs . Rutter, dairy Do., goose, bushel Oats, bushel .. .. Harley. bushel .. . Rye, Mabel .. ...e Peas, bushel ... .. Har, per ton .. ... Dressed hogs continue firm, selling at $1) for heavy, and at $11.25 to 311.5010:- light. Wheat, tall, b.uMtol_.. " 1 M 8 l 38 FARMERS MARKET. The receipts of grain to-day were nil, and prim no purely nominal. Hny was steady, with sales of 35 loads of No. l at $13 to $14.50 a. ton. One load of bundled straw sold " 812 a ton THE CHEESE MARKETS OTHER MARKETS. TORONTO MARKETS. Ire auutoritiG" iGTTitii; business revival which the has named to foreshadow Is neu continues to show A t.. ___.._A, LIVE STUCK, there continues to thaw modest. Improvement. F report an more.“ in and some improvement Scatter during the put . - -._--- . . _ 1.245 boxes cheese at 11 5-160; bal. 1400 1000 1200 1100 075 095 1300 9 50 0 50 018 0 24 0 M 014 0 ll 0 40 0 M 165 offered. 3; bulls, Tmis, July lk-Marie lithium, who had been prominent as an agent of the 1 political police of TMIU, was killed by a bomb here yesterday that had been gent to her by an unknown perm in a basket of cherries. Mahme Bakhtadz was the widow of a man who formerly was prominent among the revolutbnists. He turned traitor, howevee, betrayed manrot the revolutionary leaders and then entered the police â€nice and was killed hut autumn. Out of revenge Ma widow became a detective and devoted hermit to hunting down every one re. spolsible for her humblnd'a donut. Pot woven] mks past the“ " yartrtrM outaide the police nation. 1200 um Mott 1100 Sent to Russian Woman Del in Basket of Geeriee. 097 1450 1000 1300 1150 and a worse fright . “nu...“ m... an an Innâ€. nun a wrrr Isle experience he is not likely to forget. When about 500 feet from the baoe a "tray rifle bullet from a range nearby z-lrnck'just beside him, alarming hint so that he lost his balance and fell. He went crashing down from ledge to ledge five hundred feet {Into a tree top at the base and escaped with a law had bruise! 026 035 010 013 175 Fort William, July G, -_.- J, Me» Lawn essayed to climb Mount McKay in one of the most precipitous places pesterday, and as a result had a fatrri, n24 061 Mountain Climber Had Terrible Experience Near Fort William. 1 Chicago. July 'ic-Nearly 600 deadly weapons which the police have confiscat- ed in the last six months will be cast in, to the lake to-day. The city tug will take the police department's custodian beyond the three mile limit and he will drop overboard the revolvers. dirka, slingshots, knives and other deadly Wea- pans in thirty feet of water. This dis. position of the weapons is prescribedl by the city rode. Six Hundred Deadly Weapons, Thrown Into Lake at Chicago. "What a nice sleep I've had," I mured drowsily. "More electricity," ordered Dr, Just 40 minutes after Remilla declared dead at the hospital, wheeled from the X-ray room to and placed in a bed his name bein en from the list of dead and pla the "will recover†list. Worcester, Iiasss., July 5.--r'orty minutes after Joseph Remillard, aged 40, a baker's assistant, had been pronounced dead by the doctors at the city hospital, he sat up in a margue coffin and re- marked: "What a nice sleep I have had !" Ilemillard had been overcome by the heat and rushed to the hospital, where the doctors worked over him until he died, a. they declared. He was put into a pack of ice and was being wheeled into the morgue in the coffin used for that l purpose, when Dr. Edgar L. Drew, thel new superintendent of the hospital, passed in the corridor. He pulled back the sheet, looked carefully at the face of the corpse and asserted his belief that there was a chance of Jife not being ex. tinct. The coffin was wheeled into the X-ray room. For " minutes Dr. Drew worked. Reuults visible, none. Dr. Drew was in- sistent. He ignored the incredulous looks of the other physicians and insisted on applying current after current and all sorts of shocks on the officially dead man. There was a tremor of the man's limbs. Then the doctors eagerly sur- rounded the coffin in which the man lay. The muscles quivered and contract- ed The chest heaved and a sigh broke the stillness of the room. Remillard’s eyes opened, a faint color stole into the marble face. KILLED BY BOMB. Heat Tietiat in a Morgue Coffin “Had a Nice Sleep." Brought Bic-RTE; to Man With Electric; Current. Heat 'Viclim CORPSE SAT UP. To-da.y'n sessrion practically closed the investigation of the affairs of the fire department. Mr. Perron announc- ing that an the irregularity and vicious- nosn of the system had been proven, there was no necessity for eliciting further evidence. - ._-,.- m... “an...“ ed, although the law calls "G two years' residence. In most of these cases, Sub-Chief Dubois was named as the resposihle party. The morning’s evidence was one long string of recitals of irreguluity of appointments to the force. There were the payments referred to above. Then a number of men swore that they had been only a few weeks resi- dent in Montreal before being appoint- ‘ll ..IeL-..AI, AB T .. - Fireman Villeneuve testified to hav- ing paid Sub-Chief Marin 875 for his position, but the latter asserted that this was as a present to his wife. An- other witness swore that this money had gone to Ald. Proulx and Chief Benoit. Sub-Chief Marin not benefit.. lug. FELL Silo FEET. Montreal, July 5.--Further graft- ing methods were revealed at todayU which of the Royal Communion. Mr. Oliver Munday, who passed no many member- into Montreal's paras-you- enter fire brigade. made some serious statements regarding the action: of Mr. I Benoit, ex-chie! of the fire department. This morning Munday de- clared, in a manner that waa free of the reserve which had eharaeterised his previous utfnranma n.-. " L-.. The" on the Corruption in I... tmal Fire Depart-est. MINE THEM. and the revolvers, dirks, naive: and other deadly Wea- rty feet of water. This dis- the weapons is prescribed MORE LIGHT nary," ordered Dr. Drew. Hates after Remillard was at the hospital, he was the X-ray room to a ward a bed his name being tak. iat of dead and placed on he tom he mur. " 'al'.l - w urw ._,... “M Allâ€. . . iiviii of pow&e mm. Hair, - ttt My: Ila-itch Will 1kexetertl lust " Malice Cleanliness. Winnipeg, July 5.---The Provincial Board of Health has drafted a. srehed. nlo of laws for the guidmee of bar- beta in their trade, attd for the pro- tection of the public tttpuut infection while in barbois' chain. These suin- gent who come into mm at once. In future, barber., must ml white uni-l forms; must M and disinfect their hands me; every (mum; munt dig. infect all took, razors. mom, towels, etyteltp.et; and am down} UM†LAWS FOR BARBERS. According to one repwt, “mpg-tor Jarvis will bring a ohtsrge of mun agaimt Mos. Natkluaost. “When the flatter absolutely (Ran-lined to budge from the entrance of the House of (bnnmma, the Inspector waved for. ward his arms and pushed the wo- man away. Mrs. Pan-khm struck him in the tam, according to some wil. nesses, mom than once. The W" quietly picked up his helmet ad tamin- ued [Ironing the demanded back. _ AGED sUFPRAGBrTE ARRESTED. The first deputation comprised Mrs. Panhhurst, Mrs. Salome], Miss Mmgarson, Mrs. Haverfield. Mm Joachim.. Mrs. Manse", wife of Col. onel Mansell, and grtrnddtuqrhter of the Int? Lord Wimborne; Mm. Frank Cor. bett, sister-in-law of the late member of the House, and Miss Nettitro, who ia 79 years of age. These 'wee an “re-ted. Another woman placed under and was Ihs. Rose Massey, wife of Colonel M‘s-l we): 7 than excitement WM mow-d among the crowd by the nun‘enwnls of the siuestrian strifragette, Miss Vera Howe, who, in riding habit and bowler hat, rode backwards and foxwards. carrying rue-says betwwm the different deputa. tions, and who liltinmtdy was arrested. PULIUE I'M-J mRIw,ARAscE. 'l'lurolghout the demonstrations the moi-ice lhehau'ed with the utmmt Mr. treoranve, but tlte suffragettm In many t'Urm4ts forced them to ammo amen-at oti rough haaidting. There was much screaming. and in wome mead faint- inc, and many women had to be taken to the honp‘rtais inn stau- of collapse. The great crowd, indulged io considerable horse play, but geqtee- all} ho active sympathy was extend- ed to the sn-fhrgaettm. At 9 o'clock the pohice had orders to elear the whole vicinity of Parliament, and they gradually pressed the crowd back. One policeman's home was stably! br A man in the crowd and a comtable was badly injured. ' Tho police tried to induce the women to disperse quietly, and then began to take the members of the deputation hy the arms to lead them l (may. To the sunpriw of the apron:- tms, who were maewd around the entrance, Mrs Paneluust alumni In- spwtor Jarvis in the futee, knocking his cap in the mud. There Were cries of "shame," and several of the spoo- tutom told the suffragettes’ leader that. sin.- lsad no protooation to do such a. thing. A moment later another of the Weptrtation, Mrs. Saul Solonnn. made determined "tornpts to reach the (ur- chin of police. , OVER A EII'NDRED ARI1hh"rs. Eventually, the entire daputation was placed under arrest. By this time a swam! deputation had left Caxton Hall, “minnow by some hundreds of outfragvtttm, and others, and an attempt was made to reach the House of (‘00)an through the un- degrround passage leading from West- minster Bridge. Thie, too, was un- ‘successful, and for two hours the whole district wan in a eta-to of up- roar, the police dliqmiilg the crowds and 'rtTewtingr, women by the wholesale. The windows of many of the Govern- ment buildings were smmllwd with 'l's'tortes wmppi-d in paper, I Altogotrlmr 112 women were arrest- ed, including Mrs Panklutrst, Mrs. boloman, the lion. Mrs. MaxerfiNd, Llamghtrr of Lord Manager; Mina Mar- (Ir-won, daughter of Lady 1rargecrsoi, Mis, Maud Joachim, 11le of the uloliu- _ ist, and many other prominent women. MANY M?FXfrATORs. The Prime Minister drove away ' unobserved hy the crowd. At Caxton , Hull, where Mrs. Israel Lrttgwill, Miss , Jitntriee Forus-itoltertoott, Mis, Eli, l zaheth Rihhins and Miss Beatrice Har. ( Waders, besides all the writ-known suffra- t gettv leaders. r I NSPI'XYI‘OR'S b'Ad IE SLA PPH'). Angrily throwing the ham- on the ground, Mrs. Psrukhutmt exclaimed: "I stand on my rights) as the king's sub. jeet to enter the House of Commons," and who ondeavorert to force an m:- trance. PREMIER SENDS REG-RIMS. E'mrmom crowds of onioohm na- snubbed in the vicinity oi Parliament hours before the time set for the raid ‘upon the House, around which large bodies of POW“: lumbering several tlwusund. had taken up strategic pour tions. The first noteworthy incident was the arrest, after a, great deal of trouble, of a buxom equestrian trut. fragette. who tried to penetrate the pohice cordon to take a message to the Prrnrier. Next appeared the deputa- tion under the command ot Mrs. Punk-burst, and it was received by the cruwd with wild cheers. Fgeonted by, the police, the deputation arrived atl ithc M. Stephen‘a entrance to PaNia. lm-nt. where it Wart met by Chief impec- tur s'oaulcburr, who handed Mm. Punk hunt a letter from the Premier regret- ting his inability to receive the deputa- tion. l bilingual, and, o.--". "'1“ min 'rttempt of the militaat outing- etttes to obtain am to Ptemier As- quith by deputation resulted in ex- citing mes in Pakiameot aqua": to-night, and the avrrast of more than 100 women. Tbg’plan of can†followed the lines previously employed by the truMiagettis. Tue mum’s parliament assembled in Caxton Hail In. 8 o'elock in the evening. and can t deputation, headed by Sim. Punk- htrrst, to endeavor to we the Prime Minister, who haul previotsly decided not to receive the deputation. Over a Hundred We.“ Placed Under Arrest. Landon Police line In. Park hnt in the Tails. SUFFRAGETTES FAIL AGAIN. an Inspector in the --... . '""""., than than an the draped at.“ strewn with iet mbochonl. bugle: and quuiu, and even in er, floral toque- jet reoccu- and“ “v. a :..._-J . -- w "mug- vacuum have enough of it. It in cert-duly mar. veloud a motive And gives I wonder- iii,ii'?',iel, to a gown or)“. Thu - c In. and tut†mini, co.- posed at?!“ tut than“ (in he†In tho duped tom... .k-..... __ra. - hum, has begun-3:13; on our millineryl hot. it would - ,,__.....- umunuea um] the second bell sounded, tusd then, in evident desperation. the horse luped the fence, and, Idling into line with the long pro- cesaion " church-going which, trotted up the hill to the new Mn; house, went to " mute-0d place in the horse sheds, remind during the service, backed out n noun], who: other horses backed out, and trotted home, to doubt with a char con-chm for luring done the but he could. At the first stroke of the second bell Lady Parsons “our csme out on her from door, untied t e horse, and, enter- ing her chaise, drove to the white meet ing house on the hill, when the horse was safely sheltered during the service in one of the etslls of the long rows of horse sheds, thst then nearly surround ed that beautiful old church. l Now it so happened that one Bundsy, for some reason, lady Psrsons was an- able to go to church, and therefore the horse was not harnessed u ususl. Honing the first bell, the horse gave‘ signs of "'.tt,PPt--tritiiliir up to the bars, sad whinneying, u it to cull his friend. the hired rush, to his Inn] San- day ytornirttr duty. New I... there ringing of tu.dirst bell, a: him to the chaise, tie him by the front gate, to awtét of hia mistress. In the summer her trust urlmlly pastured near the t Sunday morning: the hired "ol-." . . Many years ago, oh “Lady Parrums" she w lived in a big. brown f, gouth side of the bean West fpringtieu, Man. from Mtlleboro, Vt,, u Imus. A CHARMING STORY True Story of I Hone That H Church-Going Habit. Pittsburg, July 5.--At midnight. tit. night 10.000 skilled workers. members of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel & Tin Workers, who are employed by the American Sheet & Tin Plate Co,, in various plants throughout Pennsyl- vania, oltio, West Virginia and Indiana, will quit Work. At that hour the "open shop" order of the company becomes effective. From indications during the past week both the company and unions have made l ‘preparations to fight. Defeat for ther, Amalgamated Association, it is said.‘ virtually means the taking away of its power in the affairs of the U. S. Moet Corporation, of which the American Sheet a Tin Plate 00. is a subsidiary. That the company is working toward this end is apparent, it is alleged, from orders issued yesterday calling for the immediate resumption of several non- union plants in this vicinity. which far over a year have been idle, my luminary, bin "Can' "vb t“?! .It would stern Al though VIN... . , In .egto-haulr ls:_, l'Pteaanot Capt. Knlinuikotf sent. a warning by special messenger to East Cape, and that place was garrisoned against at. tack. The report reaching here is that the convicts are expected to try to make Diomodes Island in the centre of Bering Straits. A Russian (TI-inc: is expected daily at Vladimir, and may intercept the fugitives. -t'apt. Kalinnikoff my: the convict- are murderers and criminals of the worst sort. Approaching an Esquimaux village, the convicts pressed the natives into their service. and command food, clothing and tools. When the Esqui- muux mama, a number were shot and the camp was left desolate. The deupateh says: Advices from Vladimir station, of the Northern Si- berian Co., norms Bering Strait, stow tint a band of prisoners in the Ynkutsk district revulted, killed the guards and started on a retreat of 2,000 miles for East Cape, where they planned to take small boats and make the mainland of Alaska, 38 miles away. Capt. Kalinni- huff, acting Governor of the district, or- dered Cossacks to take the prisoners. The fugitives, in ambush. killed four ("sucks and wounded twelve others, forcing them to retrent. [ Sank, Wish, July Ji.--' cable de- spatch from Yiome, Alaska, describe: I bloody outbreak of Roman political prisoners in the Kakutsk district, tii. beria, and the flight of the matinee" ncrous the wildermms toward Bering slrrit, in an eHor'o to reach Allah. Kill the Guard: all Start on a 2,000 Mile Walk. Russian Political Prisoners Break Jail in Siberia. rm“- ,,, Policeman MrEatroe's neck Watt broken and John Brown, Another of the riders, suffered convussinn of the brain and in- tern-l injuries. from which he may not " (‘0 ver, 10,000 T0 STRIKE. New York, July g.--Th- B. )5- emoe, a policeman, was inn-nay killed and tour other we Wand. one will, when a. borrdwed automobile, in which they were riding, teg" ovaturnod. while on the way to Coney Island today. 'the car had been borrow“ by George ot. ney from his email, Min (urn. Knyéer, of Brooklyn, in owner, and wu only giving the other men I tide. The car we going at high up.“ when 1 passenger stopped from I trolley car din-oily in front of it. A Hidden twist‘ of the steering wheel to avoid the pn- smgm- spin the atrtonuhBe kidding againaut the curb. The car pas ovu- turned and its occupants thrown out or pinned under it. rune-anus conti’nued until the bell sounded, Ind then, in evident tion. the horse land the fence, ling into line with the long pro- ok church-going "hid... trot-tad I,.." AA -. Sag! Works in Matty Statics; b“ there been I the Illa: Pl: Itvilhly "nplored, not ' h BAD GANG. u _ ---. " luau WI human the bone at .. IE‘A . .. ago, old Mrs. Nrsonr- " she was often called-- brown farmhouse, on the the beautiful common in LI ha, . , tie him to “nevi: to “Hit the plenum an, writes A. E. ii , to Our Dumb Am " the second hell um out at her home, and, enter- 0 the 'rhite may lrus_ty horse wo he Home. Gia, red. man was no. the home tPve Line up to the it to cull his his Inn] San- That Had the we at the l, “ticking --__ mum unanimously panned a Hun- lquI Introduce by u uttaftkial mom of Artamrut. uncondiuoml eoatrg btattm, ot on. per Nut. ot the local row- an- humi- th uni. t the ...... tonna- a At M. Vile-u tte B od. . . thm It . .W. I. I M 2.3L l-a _t'itatit-msuv" lama : "a: unaud In!†mum-mm E I Roe-km by That Amount. I Wuhington, July g.--m, , of Government diuhurm-monlu "r, oeipu for the final your tod. “3.173.000. Thi. ».- is may I reduced by tomorrowu "mum to approximately nzmmm. custom- receipt- foe the year viii but little abort of NMJXXI. the intern! "Venue receipt. wi "tout mm- “A ' . United Sum sold I box of brandy I Walter Udell. who took it of police. 'thrs chocolate: I Ind found to'mnuiu thtee alcohol. Ottawa OoMutlomr Convicted u Sell- in; Brandy Chocolatu. (Maw: dam-tell: One hundrod dollars and wris‘wu the fine imposed in the polite court this morning on Wnlter Nixon. confection". for selling My dined-(vs. The trial took place a week Ago, when it was shown that I clerk Ind mm - I» - _ â€any on prevented " little flour in MW 'cl into the fut just before tltey Are ndnlr e . When Boiling Milk-tt the pane in which mint, eta-huh. and “Ind dress ing. an to be boiled In first wiped out with a cloth greased with herd they wilt neither stick nor ucorcu. Lemon or crusade Bint-When linking lemon or onngnsde. peel the fruit and run through I men shopper. Lees trouble and mom Nico. To,Preve (jumble I} hot. {at wt like things may be pre ed into the ed. Gravy tor above.. Boil the gihlrh until under. crop fine. Remove chickrlu add the gibleu; thicken like cream and not". q Minced "mb-Remove all the mud Uncut from .whnt rennin. of roast lamb and mince fine, Put the bones and bits of skin in u umpun and cover with a pint of water. Add one onion, our half carrot out “all, I few sprays of pm- ley, and two mint leaves Ind simmer fur one-h" hour; add my gravy left trout tout and drain. “when with one tableapoonlul of flour rubbed II on ta blupoonfnl of butter. add n tens-Immu- ful of “It, a dull of cayenne. and tlw minced‘hmb. Let it mum to a boil and at". hour. TMY MEAT DISHES. Baked "iftat---Prepare a vim-kw Aq for broth. Put in lukepan. add two curflls of water. Butter Din- em: um] an t andpepper. Put in own and mum 5ttt well baeted. Witt take about an El NINETY MfLUON. BEHIND ei TWO RELI‘HEI. " Tomato Relish-ine peek of up“ w unto“, peled and chopped, and mum ad; line only the pulp; two cuptul, ot chopped onion, two cupfuls or Alumna celery, two cupluh of mg", two (up lulu of white mustard seed, one cuptut nf I... 4...- A---, - . - urn- uuwer. sugar. and 1'ggt, Add vinegar, steam in double boiler until the consistent? of thick cream. “hull mm add wh pped cram and pour .m-r orange. Add pecan or English “Minn karmic. Orange "Ind-dat seedless Waugh in cubes and cover with the following salad dressing: Yolks of four eggs, um um cupful sugar, ottc"quarter ruptul bulm, two tubleupooulula of vinegar, pun-u ot mustard, punch of cayenne pepper. .Cmn butter. sugar. and mm, add French tutad--Drtsin the lulu lull . an of pen, add one pin: cut ':,'AT,; one oupful of Mam broken ugllsh walnut inn-b. cuplul of tart orange: out um. pieces. To- together lightly. with tender white celery lea mayonnaise. Set in a cool plea! wanted. “LAOS. Pu "ud--one cu: of small pug, drained one-fourth of a pound m...“ cheese, one dour: emu pickles, m... u blespoonlul of finely chopped olurrts, The chm and pickles would hr â€.1, fine. Add tttayottmtUe (In-sung, " ill serve turd". Brown Sugar Pudee--'rwo ruptulu ot light brown - or one twin] of ere... butter In" lit? of egg; cook un. til ft I. ready to be Mite" liku. Chocâ€. Into ttedge And add cup walnut tutuitr, Walnut “Id Fruit Glace true ('upful awn ole-lull cuplul Wlh‘l. Mu to; gather until - it dissuln-d, 'lhen boll until t little makes a (Th-p ball in water. Do ttot INT. When (mob-.1 drop by spoonfuls on buttered plum-r Place on each piece one-half Walnut “r a shee of orange or strawberry. ’l‘m-n pour more eatsdy over it und let it "Uni thevent Pat Sputteriug- he ..I.J.A.v Ibis muttering and [Uh ot the Int when can. hominy, app»- and things are dropped hm it to Ity be prevented if a [in]. mm- L. we" KITCHEN TIME Bone]! Everton Toffee Two of brown sugar, five tum-5W butter, two tablespounfula of w tabtespoontul of vinegar. P," minute. Md do not stir. IN Jul-u in gum. he My tueipea---Two t'tt Jul. mum aunt, one-fourth Imp!“ g: - two alum thocolaw, one te. bleupoontul of butter. Mm) my" min- utes, then bent and spread m buttered til to cool. Ttro cupfuls ot brown h . Ar. ole-In" cupful of cram, (me I: spoon“! of vanilla. one cupful of chop. ped "In“. Butter size of rug, Boil an minutes, then beat and [mm (II. [on “Judge t?ren.dy in pan _ qrup. Put on to boil'uulil TM“ m nu lull when put into 'ict,,"',,'?,',., into two beaten whites of G, Lil put in “In" H"t,Hele, 01' tusrdiiTo' â€in. glee. PM: in 3 little rose, “humid ct. “gills Myoringl. “4 - " â€muADE CANNES. Turkish Nougi-Two vupfui, of ' . ', half tytrtul of water, hult ' MW" I" FINE ok I). he {an in om- onr but ya: mu he a, with I In“ of ab“: W "i' year win falt of "tto/tttsooo. and '""""MtNtut our n “I I." to date i, “I in like!" to I... Pe'mtu will hi m n clerk had rhoeoiatm, to t to the chief “no analyzed . per m'nt. of SAVERS. tmuU ctiou A the liquor fro. Two will 'Ipoon[ulg of )1 water, on Boil (in... The t of finely Belted “a ' Ind one .0 small r, garttiah an“, and are until 39911 G c001 out held took at “11min talking, aha-bod "Then all to no that one by, h It! to tb an: the I“ up to “Fifty p "rm, pe could." "ith Y' in: the 1 coma; mid L tt VOILd " Lucv 'Are pa t lowed. it! Now -I Old let Inc Bl --qualf.r good one tn'od t gm “We but. . otrongl (new I in I abould v ed .deerti, dbl: at maker 'a "Mme! the huui Hovr no! stone! Berry!†duply. to t 'ISI .u “dent h ("life all" od the r mmy-fi no the 1 “d I Wu like P" dattghter “and t have It!“ tub I Old-i.- .in an The 1 I'm M ttttnts. are tl have d “Try In Ufft'l and can Brook. I “I “an! “nod. I my." .4 I." the duly I don‘t tin would tit " Win. ml up f " of How l defsaut mry is I qtslied Inn-moon "rut-tw an: Nd with ceea.ed PM bee, dang you - In: due C". II the tam, " office 'ett In. Sh: Don't W., , I'""'------ unusual INS,. non Shut It]. 'erl tt Witl It bus Mixing Wi HIM mid th tl _mw WI u u w?) tl tl,