Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 2 Sep 1910, p. 6

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3" ,, wreck HorrOr on the Grand. Trunk Rail- way in Michigan. ' train-s. residence is thought to be Chica- cuts and bruises. Master of Battle Creek, fireman on No. 4, the gten-year-old son of probably fatally scalded, now under crushed and care of physicians at Durand. ' Flint Hospital. I‘Mâ€"éfl ILL L, '9 A despatch from Durand, Mich., Thomas House, Durand... Mrs. LeS- says: Six dead, seven seriously inâ€" jured, and three slightly-is given out here on Thursday night by the pital with a fractured right leg and Grand Trunk Railway Company as hip. the official casuality list resulting from Wednesday night’s rear-end ing, from internal injuries, lies in collision between two east-bound Flint Hospital. Battle Creek, engineer on No. 14, The dead :â€" Mrs. Squires’ go, but this is uncertain. Squires, Mrs. Squires, was burned. Mrs. Alma Woodward, en route from Chicago to Port Huron; body, but her from St. John’s Hospital, Chicago, accompanying Mrs. Woodward, was burned to a charred mass. Mr. James McBean" of Chicago was also burned to a crisp, and Mrs. E. Gilâ€" pm of 25 East 46th place, Chicago, was scalded and burned. The injured are zâ€"Mrs, F. S. Mcâ€" Bean, Chicago, right leg fractured, taken to Flint Hospital; Albert B. Watts, Edmonton, Alta., face and hands blistered badly, but con- dition not serious; removed to Clinton A. Davis of 598 West St. Catherine street, Montreal. A son of Mrs. Woodâ€" ward, burned on all parts of the body, condition grave, lies in the . . lie Dochler, years old, was taken to Flint Hos- go, right arm fractured and suffer- gers in the telescoped Pullman was Mich., was badly burned'about the established on Thursday afternoon. hair was scarcely All of these, say the railway peo- touched. A nurse, name unknown, ple, have been accounted for. , To Assistant Superintendent Fitzhugh at Montreal the wired that there were nineteen pasâ€" six Were killed and the remains identified. Five injured are in the likely to die. Eight passengers con- tinued their journey to their desâ€" tinations, having escaped from the forward end of the car uninjured. jured; but will recover. man on No. 4 is badly but not seri- ously burnt. Aside from the loss of the ‘car by fire, the damage to the equipment will be slight. E ,. Tavistock, Ont., 41 Mrs. F. S. Shel'terz, Chica- D. B. Mitchell of Geo. Donaldson That there were nineteen passen- Durand official-s sengers in the Nebraska, of whom hospital at Durand, one of whom is Engineer Mitchell of train No. .14 is in Flint hospital seriously in- The fire- 'â€"__.______â€"._._â€"._.â€"- -' '-â€" - ' ...___..._._.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-.â€"â€"â€"..â€"â€"â€"_â€" CROWD WAS ncerLE. Euston Station. A despatch from London says: Dr. H. H. Crippen and Miss Le- neve were given a hostile reception by a mob on their arrival at Eus- ton Station ‘on Saturday evening. Crippen, who is on the verge of a' nervous collapse, is being close- ly guarded. He slept little toward the end of the voyage over. He had many books, but read few of them. He talked little, but mut- tered to himself. Extra guards were placed over him during the last two nights of the ocean trip. Unseen by the passengers, the prisâ€" oner walked the top deck in the early morning and in the evening handcuffed to Inspectors Dew and Mitchell. Crippen had no commu- nication with Miss Leneve, who went on deck in the evening with her wardresses. Miss Leneve was cheerful and talked freely to the wardresses. Inspector Dew fool- ed the waiting crowd at Liverpool, landing at the landing-stage aft, and taking his charges at once into the train for London. '+â€"â€"--râ€"â€" NORFOLK APPLE CROP. .. The Season’s OutputSOld to Luck- now Buyer. A despatch from Simcoc says: Perhaps the most important deal in apples made in the Dominion this season was closed at Simcoc on Thursday last, when Mr. J. E. Johnson, manager of the Norfolk Fruitâ€"growers’ Association, closed out their season’s pack, 30,000 bar- rels, to .Mr. J. G. Anderson of Lucknow. Onc matter of great sigâ€" nificance in connection with this deal is the fact that up to about six years ago the county of Nor- folk was practically unknown as an when Mr. appleâ€"growing district, L Johnson appeared on the scene, and with the co-operative organization of the Growers, the membership of which is 355, took up the wOrk of good orchard management, and brought it to such perfection in these few short years that the eyes of the entire apple-purchasing world are now turned on Norfolk county. KAISER RA] SE S TEMPE ST. . Crippen Was Hootcd on Arrival at His Claim to Divine Right Strong- ly Criticiscd. A despatch from Berlin says: The speech delivered on Thursday night by Emperor William at the Provincial banquet at Koenigs- burg, and in which he} reiterated and emphasized 'his belief in the Divine mandate by which he rules, referred to the Prussian Crown as bestowed by God’s grace and not by Parliaments or people’s assem- blies, and laid a lance against the present movement for woman suf- frage, is the political sensation of the hour. The leading organs of the German press devote extended comments to it, generally criticiz- ing the Emperor’s utterances, and there are indications that the dis- course will have a deep political effect upon the country. >1< TWO MEN KILLED. Immigrant Spccial Ran Into Light Engine. A despatch from Belleville says: An immigrant special train from the east ran into a light engine in the G. T. R. yard here at 6 o’clock on Saturday morning. Peter xoung, engineer on the light on- glne, and Edwin Brewer, car in- spector, who was riding on the enâ€" gine, were both instantly killed. The victims are both married men with families, and resided here. Both engines were badly wrecked. Robert Weir, of Brockville, was en- ginccr on the special, his fireman being a Montreal man. The latter sustained slight injuries. â€"â€"â€">I‘ BONDED CARS LGOTED. Twenty J uvcnilcs to Appear Before London Magist 'utc. A despatch from London, Ont., says: Twenty juveniles will appear before Magistrate Love on a charge of breaking into C. P. R. bonded cars and stealing goods-therefrom. The police believe from the appar- ently systematic manner in which the thefts were carried on that old- er people are behind the lads. â€"-â€"â€"â€"->I‘ The convention annexing Corea to Japan has been'signed. I _______,____.___â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" NEW lllSElSE 1 ill Ull‘llhi Two Cases of Infantile Paralysis Has Tilt WORLhSMARllElS REPORTS FROM TIIE LEADING TRADE CENTRES. Prices of Cattle. Grain, Cheese and Other Dairy Product: at Home and Abroad; BREADSTUFFS. Toronto, Aug. 30. â€"â€" Ontario Wheatâ€"Old No. 2 winter nominal at $1.02 outside; new, 95c to 980 outside, according to location. Manitoba Wheatâ€"No. 1 northâ€" ern, $1.12; No. 2 northern, $1.10%; No. 3 northern, $1.08 at lake ports for immediate shipment. ‘ Cornâ€"American No. 2 yellow, 69%0 to 70c, Toronto ireights. Oatsâ€"Canada Western, No. 2, 41%c; No. 3 Canada Western, 400, at lake ports, for immediate ship- ment; Ontario No. 2 white, 38c to 390 outside; No. 3 white, 370 to 380 outside, 410 to 420 on track, Toron- to; new oats, nominally, 350 to 360. Barleyâ€"No. 2, 510 to 52c; No. 3 etxra, 49c to 500; No. 3, 46c to 47c outside. Peasâ€"No. 2, 760 to 780. Manitoba Flourâ€"Quotations at Toronto are :â€"-First patents, $6.20; second patents, $5.70 ;, strong bak- ers’, $5.50; 90 per cent., Glasgow freights, 255. Ontario Flourâ€"New winter wheat flour, for future delivery, $3.75 to $3.85, at the mills. ‘ Millfeedâ€"Manitoba bran, $20 per ton; shorts, $22 per ton, track, To- ronto. Ontario bran, $20 per ton; shorts, $22 per ton on track, ’To- ro’nto. COUNTRY PRODUCE. ' Butterâ€"Creamery prints, 230 to 240; separator prints, 20c to 210; dairy prints (choice), 1% to 200; do., tubs, 18c; inferior tubs, 160 to 17c. Eggsâ€"19c per dozen in case lots. Cheeseâ€"11%c. per pound for large and 11%c per pound for twins. ' Beansâ€"$2 to $2.10 per bushel for primes and $2.15 for hand-picked. Honeyâ€"90 to 100 for strain-ed in (SO-pound tins; 5 to 10-pound tins, 9%0 to 10%c; No. 1 comb, $1.75 to $2 per dozen; No. 2, $1.50; Potatoesâ€"70c to 90c per bag. PROVISIONS. Wholesale quotations :â€" Rollsâ€"~Smoked, 150 to 15%0; me- dium and light hams, 190 to 19%0; heavy, 17%0 to 18c; bacon, 190 to 200. Porkâ€"Short out, $30 to $30.50 per barrel; mess, $27.50 to $28. Lardâ€"Ticrces, 14%0; tubs, 14%,0; pails, 14%c; stocks steady. Smoked and Dry Salt-ed Meatsâ€"â€" Long clear bacon, tons and cases, 15c to 15%c; backs (plain), 210 to 21%0; backs (pea-meal), 21%c to 22c. Green meats out of pickle, 10 less than smoked. MONTREAL MARKETS. Montreal, Aug. 30.â€"Barley-â€"Car lots, ex store, No. 3, 53c to 540; No. 4, 490 to 500. Corn â€"â€" American No. 2‘ yellow, car lots, ex store, 71%0; No. 3 yellow, 70%0 to 710. Oatsâ€"Car lots, ex store, No. 2 Canada western, 4-10 to 41%c; No. 3, 39% to 400. Hayâ€"No. 1, $14.50 to $15; No. 2 extra, $13.50 to $14; No. 2, $12 to $12.50; clover, mixed, $10.50 to $11; clover, $9 to $10. Millfecdâ€"Bran, Ontario, $20.50 to $21; Manitoba, $20; middlings, Ontario, $21 to $22; shorts, Maniâ€" toba, $22; mouillie, pure grain, $33 to $34; mixed, $28 to $29. Flourâ€"Manitoba. spring wheat patents, firsts, $6.30 ;- do., seconds, $5.80; winter wheat patents, $5.40 to $5.50; Manitoba strong bakers, $5.60; straight rollers, $5.20 to $5.25; straight rollers in bags, $2.50 to $2.60; extras, $2.15 to $2.25. , Butterâ€"Best creamery, 23%0 to 23%0; creamery, 21%0 to 22%0. Cheeseâ€"Western, 11c to lll/Qc; eastern, 10%c to 110. ' Eggsâ€"Selected stock, 21c to 220 dozen; straight receipts, 17% to 180 doz.; second grade, 120 to 12120. m UNITED STATES MARKETS. . St. Louis, Aug. 30.â€"-Wheatâ€"â€" September, 98%0; December, $1.- 02%. . Buffz“ ~, Aug. 30.â€"â€"Wheat â€" 'A despatch from [Niagara Falls, country. Gertrude, the twelve- Spring wheat, No. 1 Northern, Ont., says: Infantile paralysis has year-old daughter of GeOI‘ge M. carloads store, $1.18; Winter, N0. 2 invaded Canada. Two cases are Tuttle, the County Attorney of red, $1.03; No. 2 white, $1.01, Cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, 660; No. 4 yel- low, 640; No. 3 corn, 64%0; No. 4 corn, 62%c,, all on track through billed. Oatsâ€"No. 2 white, 365.30; No. 3 white, 36c; No. 4 white, known here, one of which is in St.;Niagara County, and a prominent Catharines, the other at Moon lawyer of Niagara Falls, N. Y., is Lake, Ont. Threeâ€"year-old Rosa suffering from the disease at the Hipplc of St. Catharine's is serious- family’s summer home at Moon ly ill with the dread disease. She Lake. Dr. Horton, Tuttlc’s family came to Canada, from Cambridge,lphysician, and Dr. Mackenzie, To- 34%0 Barleyâ€"Malting, 73 to 750. 'England, scvcral inon’fa‘is ago WhClI,l'0nl0. a specialist. are both in atâ€"lRyeâ€"No. 2. on track, 780. Canal the Ripple family removed to this wndnm-e. -§reighu....whem u, Ne... york. 4%,. on, R ________.â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- L TOLL TWLLLLLLLLL The Official Report Of the NatiOnal Forest ‘ Superintendent. A despatch from Spokane, Wash- ington, says : Forest fires have slain more than two‘ hundred persons, nearly all fire-fighters, in Idaho, according to figures compiled on Wednesday night from latest re- ports. Superintendent Weigel, of the Cour d’Alene National Forest, after receiving many reports of disaster to various parties of his six hun- dred employees, posted a bulletin on Wednesday night in his office at Wallace, announcing the death of one hundred and fourteen men. He also expressed grave concern for the safety of Ranger Joseph B. Halm and seventy-four men, who were surrounded by fire Saturday night in the forest on the Big Fork of the Cour d’Alene River, near where _ another party- lost thirteen men. ‘ The charred bodies of twentyâ€"five- fire-fighters were found on Tuesday. on Setzer Creek, country. Japanese dragged in the St. Joe severely scorched themselves to Two Avery, Idaho, on Tuesday night, and told of the death of ten of their“ companions. The twelve men, emâ€"~~3 ployees of the Chicago, Milwaukee; & Puget Sound Railroad, had gonel out to fight fires. They were sur--‘ rounded by flames, and only two men escaped. The number of deaths in Washington was on Wed- nesday reduced to three, all in the " Pen d’Oricllic Valley, near port. New- One of three victims, Mrs. Ernest Reinhardt, wife of a ranclh er, is the only woman known to have been burned to death in any, of the fires. WW LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Montreal, Aug. 30.â€"Calves, $3 to $12; live hogs, $9 to $9.50 per 100 pounds; sheep, 40 to 4%0 pound; lambs, $3.50 to $5; steers, choice, 6c to 6%0; good, 5%0 to 00; middle, 5%0 to 5%0; fair, 4%c to 5c; common,'4%c to 4%c. Toronto, Aug. '30.-â€"â€".â€"r few select- made a compulsory study at the university. The International Congress of Sailors and Seamen resolved to de-’ clare an international strike if its; grievances are not remedied. UNITED STATES. Professor James of Harvard is ed steers and, heifers were bought dead. for local killing at $5.85 to $6. The Several men were injured in a , 1 best butchels ranged from $530 to strike riot near Scranton, Pa., on $5.65, medium at $4.90 to $5.25. Cows and bulls were steady at from $3.50 to $5, a few extra choice cows l d The demand ' - selling up to $5.25. for stockers and feeders is getting stronger. Several loads were sold at from $4 to $5.25. Sheep were steady. Lambs, slow and 500 lowâ€" er. Hogsâ€"Firm; selects were quot- ed at $8.50 to $8.60 f.o.b. and $8.- 75 to $9 fed and watered. ‘ ._.__â€"â€"â€"’.Bâ€" CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS HAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVER THE GLOBE. Telegraphic Briefs From Our Own and Other Countries of Recent Events. CANADA. The cost of deepening the Wel- land Canal is placed at $50,000,â€" 000. » A rainbow trout weighing 35 pound-s was caught in a dredge at Sault Ste. Marie. The first shipment of new wheat has arrived at Port Arthur from St. Agathe. John Penny, a C. P. R. switchâ€" .man, was killed by an engine at North Bay on Friday. A report comes from Hamilton of the discovery of silver and lead near Greensville. Mrs. Sellers, wife of a well-to-do farmer of Morris, hanged hers-elf to a tree in the orchard. The Postoflice Department will place stampâ€"selling machines in To- ronto, Montreal, Ottawa and Winâ€" nipeg. - A fifteen hundred pound nugget from the Temiskaming mine in Co- balt will be one of the exhibits at Toronto Exhibition. Archibald Orr was sentenced to four years in the penitentiary at Montreal for gouging his wife’s eye out. The output of the Ontario 'mines for the first half of the year amounted to over twelve million dollars. Joseph A. Gadoua, C.N.R. station agent at Hubcrdeau, Quebec, was sent to jail for' a year for stealing a valise. ' , One of the women attendants at ‘ Hamilton Asylum is said to be un- der surveillance in connection with Moir’s escape. By the arrest of a man who gave his name as John Baglcy the To- ronto police believe they have in custody a forger and thief. News comes from Quebec that the Hon. Jules Allard has made the announcement of an increase of $120,000 over the previous year in the revenue of the Crown Lands Department. GREAT BRITAIN. Highâ€"priced whiskey has result- ed in a marked decrease of drunk- enness in the United Kingdom. The opium habit is said to be spreading among women in Lon- don. ' The council of Oxford University !lllLi advised that (ii-col; cease to be l L l l l l. Friday. . Damage estimated at one million ollars was caused by a tornado in Michigan. The list of dead in the forest fires- in Montana and Idaho numbers hundreds. Ex-Prcsid-ent Roosevelt promises to expose crooked and grafting ofâ€"v ficials in public life. The kidnapper who stole a four- earâ€"old boy at Kingston, N. Y, strangled him to death. An automobile crashed into a construction train at Queen’s Bor- ough, N. Y., and two persons were killed and nine injured. 1 A number of commercial bodies in, the United States have filed com-: plaints with the Interstate Com-E m-erce Commission, alleging -extor-; tionate rates and violation of laws. GENERAL. Election disorders as a protest against the Government are feared in Portugal. Brandon and Trench, the alleged British spies in Germany, are to be tried at Leipzig. The Principality of Montenegro was proclaimed a kingdom on Sun- day. A Dutch aviator was killed and a number of other aviators in differâ€" ent places were injured in accidents on Saturday. >I< HORSE DROPPED DEAD . A Peculiar Incident Happened at Bellcville. A despatch from Bellcvillc says: A peculiar incident happened in this city on Thursday morning. Walter H. Reeves, a clever hockey player, died here on Wednesdayfi It seems that his father owned a. ' horse which the dead boy used to drive. Thursday morning a bro-; ther of the deceased hitched up the horse and drove to the front of his father’s house, where the dead body. of Walter Reeves was lying. The horse whinnicd a few times, looked‘ around as though he were looking for someone and dropped dead. I *‘~__.__ GAYN OR’ S W0 U N l) HFALE I) .. .__... Mayor Eating 'l‘hrcc Square Meals. A despatch from ‘New York sayse‘ The bullet wound in Mayor Gay- nor’s neck has healed on the out- side and the irritation of the throat, caused by granulation on the inside! has ceased. The Mayor cats heart- ily and is now back to his regular diet of three square meals a day. He is allowed to, take a little exercl cise in the hospital corridors. ~X‘ TANK 0F WHEY FELL. .â€" Ncw York 4â€"..â€" Crashcd Through Factory Coiling, But lIurt NO One. A despatch from Kingston says: A big tank full of whey at the MOS- cow cheese factory crashed down through the ceiling of the make room on Wednesday. The stays holding up the tank 'gave way. For- tunately the cheeseâ€"makers were not in the room when the accidentl happened. i . a. _ «.4. mm: A i v. w; m...w....~.....v...w.wu....... ._ .... ..-.:..mm. rm-vwmm-w

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