Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 15 Nov 1912, p. 3

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Wm. l 1‘. E 5’ | . l‘: i. g ,7. ...._ NLS.‘ . tinople is no lel’l’S A The-Victorious Bulgars Pursuing the Broken and DemoraliZed Turks I A dcspatch from Sofia says:‘:state of rebellion. There is word The Turkish army commanded by i from that beleaguered city that the Nazim Pasha was completely crushâ€" I Turkish soldiers are flatly refusing ed in the great battle of the lastito fight any, longer, and have to two days on the Scrai-Tchorlu line. be driven to the defences at the According to the semi-official Mir, point of the sword. That city is apâ€" thc Turks lost in killed and wound- parently to be starved into surrou- ed more than double the losses at dcr. The Bulgarian commanders Lule Burgas. The Bulgarians are‘ realize that its fall is but a mat- now pursuing the defeated enemy. tor of days, and that they cannot The sanguinary character of the ‘ afford to lose any more men in an recent engagements. which it is re- assault. They are contenting them- portcd have involved losses to the selves with sweeping down on Turkâ€" Turksof £10,000 men, has been due ' iSh wagon trains and isomting to the extraordinary energy of the Adl'iallople from the world- Bulgarian attack. The View of the I Bulgarian staff is that the Turks are so demm filmed that fmm'a‘l at- The Turkish losses in killed and “mks may be undertaken even lwounded during the five days’ fight- . ' xrr ' ' ' l. . . . . agamsr’ the smoke“ pomtmnstmg 1n the Vicmity of Lulc Burgas without superior forces, and tho‘, . . Turkish shortage of artillery andiand Buna'rhlssn‘r are estimated at Turkish Losses Huge. ammunition has contributed to the success of these tactics captured 37' batteries of quickâ€"firing guns and took 2,000 prisoners. They The Bulgarian vanguard, it is 81m snimd f 1 t. d said, has reached Lake Derkas, one ‘ T ‘ our ocomo Ives an 243 railroad cars. detachment passing between thop lake and the sea. Another line of the Bulgarian advance is reported to be attacking the forts in front Adespatch received in London on of the town of Tchatalja, while still, Saturday from Constantinople to another column, which marchedjthe Daily Chronicle, coming .by an down the main road from Tchorluilndil‘ect route, confirms the previ- to Silivri, is now advancing to B0. ous report of the Greek occupation gados for the purpose of forcing agof Salonica, and says the approach passage along the coast of the sea i of the Greeks was attended by aw- of Marmom. ‘ ful scenes. Before they entered the These are, however, only fiying;,li‘0Wn 8: terrible massacre of the columns. The main body has not‘flon'MOSlem P9P111al31011 tOOk place yet commenced the attack on Tch- and the shooting and looting was atalja fortifications. general; . _ According to statements made by possession they imprisoned'all the ,rominent public men in Sofia, pashas,'oflicials and Turkish 'olfi- Bulgaria will reject mediation un- cers- The Turks “OW 1“ captlvmy til Tchatalja has: been captured and l at salon?” number 97,000 men- Adrianoplo has fallen, and although] it is said that entry into Constan- part of the allies Bulgarian Headquarters, Nov. plans, Bulgaria will not listen to 10.â€"“Anyone who saw the specâ€" the suggestion of peace negotia- tacle presented by the retreat of tions unless Turkey gives an un- the Turks on November 5 and 6 dertaking to bring no more rein- must have been convinced of the forcements from Asia, hopelessness of any further resist- ance on their part to the Bulgar~ ian attacks,” writes Lieut. Weg- ener. “On every road leading cast- ward towards Tchatalja indescrib- ably fascinating and convincing pictures of a panicâ€"stricken flight were to be witnessed; abandoned guns, overturned ammunition wag- gons, broken-down oxen, and hers- Massacre in Salonica. A Broken Army. Tolmtaldja’s Forts Taken. A despatch from London says: The victorious Bulgarians made one swift, vicious assault on the fortifi- cations of Tchataldja on Thursday, and won them. The disheartened Turks are now scattered over the 25â€"mile district between those cap-' tured lines of defence and (3011515111,- es driven to death; of a whole de- tmople, and the Bulgarians are taChment 0f apathetic TurkiSh pursuing them, capturing some d troops COWel‘inS‘a CXImH-Sted and killing others. There is now noth- Staffing, by the l'OadSide Without ing save those disorganized, fleeing arms and in tattered uniforms, and bands of Turks to stop the Bulgar- soldiers would only be too delight-‘ tans in their conquering march {30- Cd to be captured, as at least they wards the capital of their enemies, might hope to get something to eat. This is no army, but simply a pack ‘ of wretched human beings. who are not even capable of defending their own skins, and these are the troops who are trying to hold the anti- quated earthworks of Tchatalja against the irresistible assault of the Bulgarian troops.” Bulgarians Occupy Drama. The Bulgarians occupied the town of Drama on November 5. The Turkish troops in that region have been scattered in all directions. Most of them have surrendered their arms and are returning to their homes. Other remnants are so demoralized that the peasants terrorize them and compel them to disarm and flee. Throughout the district the inhabitants have warm- ly welcomed the Bulgarians, and the Bulgarian administration has been established. It is officially announced that the port of Rodosto, on the Sea of Mar- mora, and the city of Visa, to the southeast of Adrianople, were oc- cupied by the Bulgarian troops on November 5. Victory for Sorviaus. A despatch from Belgrade says: Dibra, 45 miles southwest of Pris- renrl. in Albania, was‘taken by the Scrvians on Saturday after severe fighting, according to private ad- vices. Thc remnants of the Turk- ish Macedonia army have assemb- led there. ' The some reports say that Monastir has surrendered. Major Popovich, in command of the Servian cavalry. has captured Dairan, with a thousand Turks. . â€""““' . The third Servian army is well Adriuuoplc in Rebellion. on its way towards the Adriatic, ' A despatch from London says: but progress is slow on account of Adrianople is reported to be in a. the bad roads. It is expected that I fights» "egg". on : When You Get Run Down --ca!ch cold easilyâ€"and dread. instead of enjoying.the keen winter weatherâ€"then you need Na-Dru-Co Tasteless Preparation of . Cod Liver Oil ~ This Naâ€"Dru-Ca Compound embodies the well-known nutrltlve and curative elements of Cod Liver Ollâ€"Hypophosphites to build up the nervesâ€"Extract of Wild Cherry to act on the lungs and bronchial tubcsâ€" « and Extract of Malt, which, besides containing valuable nun-Intent itself. helps the weakened digestive organs to assimilate other food. The disagreeable taste of raw Cod Liver 08- ii entirely absent, and the Compound ls decldedly pleasant to take. In 500. and $1.00 bottles. at your Drugglst's. 305 NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL co. or CANADA, morn). ] an is causal) 125,000 men. The Bulgarian troops - -9351 WOODROW WILSON. When the Greeks “0k Elected President of the United States. GOVERNOR. T. R. MARSHALL. Of Indiana, elected Vice-President of the United States. â€"..« Durazzo will be taken in a day or two. Durazzo is one of the ports which Servia has announced her intention of seizing and holding.’ __uz< LIT" ‘LE CHILD KILLED. Shot Through Head in Struggle (0 Got: a Revolver. A dcspatch from North Bay says: On Saturday morningr Arthur, the three-year-old son of Jon. Leclair, was shot through the head with a bullet from a revolver, and died on Sunday. His mother had occa« sion to leave the children alone in the house, and had barely left the house when the children went into the room of an uncle, who lived with the family. and, finding the keys of his trunk, opened it and found a revolvor. There were three children in the room at the time, the oldest being a boy of twelve. The children all reached for the revolver, and the older boy realizing the danger of the weapon, tried to take it away from the younger children. when his finger closed on the self-cocking trigger and the explosion followed. rI‘_.._.__. MONTREAL CARS (TOLLID '1. .- Siugle Truck Trolley Run Away and Nine People were Hurt. A despatch from Montreal says: With the motorman hanging out of the vestibule shrieking a vain warn- ing, a single truck tram-car whiz- zed down a 5 per cent. grade. on St. Lawrence Boulevard on Thurs day morning, and smashed into an- other car standing at the corner of Ontario Street. Nine people were taken to the hospital in ambua lances, of whom two are seriously injured and the others out by glass, and a score badly shaken up While Miss Bessie Laub was lyingnbn the ground someone stole her purse, with $10 in it and her engagement ring. [<â€" Sarnia and Ingersoll are to vote on local option in January. wen 0i ROYAL card? A Passenger Describes It and Tells of The Sudden Orders That Came Too Late. â€"_r A dospatch from Quebec says: about half the gassengers were We picked up the pilot off Father placed on board. , Point on Wednesday, says a passen- .0“ the “my “P the five? anOthe‘r ger on the Royal George. Quaram ship-wreck and tragedy was averted _ . . by a hairsbreadth. There is an tine and medical men arrived about occasion to discuss that event The four o’clock, and then the passen- ' Branch-Canadian, as a skilful navi- gers went below to finish prepara- 'galxing-ofiiccr on a night as black as tions for disembarking. A slight Egypt, is not impressive. There . . wore shouts of “Sans Vapare” from haz lllll" H- 2 ‘- I u 10‘ ts - . . c l P 0‘ m. 1.116 ‘1‘“, b t’ 1 3h ‘ the bridge that did not impress a. were plainly Visible and full speed was maintained. . We had one of dull engineer. The ferry was old the oldest pilots on board, and no and shaky, and the sleet and rain one thought of danger- Suddenly beat 111 or dropped through the per- those on the upper deck heard a ous sailcloth covering. and through 4 . it all women and children huddled sha- ' : “ - ' - ‘ ” r - - on; goiggy andHifilghea‘ 81:31:: br $8,211? Without semblance of fear or panic, ” ’ ,, . . ’ With no murmur, no cries, and no Hard astern from the pilot. A sudden check, followed by a visible dread, save the drawn face wrenching, grinding, bumping mo- and the tears of a mother hastily tion, told of the futility of bot-h or- ggfifilfi’lfiilzhgohefl if; and ders. The Royal George was hard , ‘ ' yr' ' and fast on the rocks of the Isle of “"3 Women “are BNVC' Orleans, about 'eight miles below .Tho'British soldier and the Bri- Qucbcc, apparently held from stem tish sailor have been extolled. I to stern. ‘ cannot express my admiration for The reversed engines made no im- the British woman. She is the very prcs-sion. There was no shadow of essence of selfâ€"control in an emer- disordcr or confusion on board. Sency and 8' mOdEI 0f dlsciplino- The officers went about their. duties Some Of the Officers feared a crush quietly, and it was difficult, to be- when the deck was reached. The licvc that a. shipwreck had occur- old ferry not only reached the dock. red. Unquestiouably the pilot she crashed into it, and lurched must have mistaken a bright light back. Two or three women laughed on the Island for one of his lights quietly and held their babes closer. and simply laid the ship’s bow on Old men swore quietly at the hap- across the Rocks_ The boats were hazard carelessness with an over- swung outside as a precautionary loaded rotten SCOWâ€" Then the p33- measure, and then the order came se-ngers filed out and the ferry to prepare to transfer to tugs. started back for the four hundred Fearful of Listing. who stopped behind without a com-- The tide was at full when she plaint to spend a sleepless night on struck. As it began to recedo there a stranded vessel. Apparently the was p05sibility of serious listing and only exc1ted person in ev1dence was a possible catastrophe. In View of a portlv Yankee, who took care to this danger and the rapidly recod- be first on shore. and he was palpa- iug tide. the coming of the tugs bly and ostentatiously first down seemed long delayed. Finally about the gang plank to the ferry. . His 10 p.m., the old ferryboat North trembling limbs and nerve-twisted came alongside. But the tide was features only emphasized the worth out, and she could not transfer. of a British woman and a British About midnight she stood by and _____________..._._...__..â€"â€"â€"-â€"- mother. _____________...._____â€"â€"â€"-â€":â€"--~- 4 _ _ “m”, , n '- . n as: 5 Bishop Stringer is undergo an "operation for appendiatis at the ' ' ~T0ronto General Hospital. - "" Simon Bryne, a lineman, met in- 55909” FROM “'5 LEM’W“ ""05 stant death while at work on an “"7355 0“ AMP-m“- arc light pole at Kingston on Fri.- - ~â€" dabf' . "ions of Cattle, cram. Cheese and cum â€"â€" __ Produce at Ham and Manna. Evgyy Ema-,3; gebgnfiuye Breadstufis. ‘ issued by the treat, West Fisheries. 1,,Ltd., ' Pays Annually 6% and Participates in All Profits, Besides Being insured Against Loss of hriueipal. Toronto, Nov. 12.â€"â€"Flour~â€"Ninety no!“ cent. patents, $4. to $4.10. Mamtobas. $5.- 50 for first patents, $5 for seconds and $4.80 for strong bakers’. Manitoba Wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern. 931-20. Bay ports; No. 2 at 91c, and No. 5 at 890. Bay ports. Feed wheat. 650, lay ports. Ontario Wheatâ€"No. 2 new white and red wheat, 96 to 97c. outside. and sprout- ed. 80 to 85c, outside. ' Oats~No. 2 Ontario, 39 to 40c. outside, and 430 on track, Toronto; No. 3 Ontario. 37 to 38c. outside; Western Canada oats. 45c for No. 2, and at 420 for No. 5. Peasâ€"No. 2 at.$1.10. Barleyâ€"Forty-eight 1b.. barley of good quality. 65 to 670. outside. . Cornâ€"No. 2 old American. 67c, all NHL Toronto. and No. 3 at 66c, allrarl. T9- ronto, and No. 5 at 660, all rail. No. a. Bay ports, 63c. New corn, December dc- livery, 561-2 to 57c, Toronto. Ryeâ€"~78 to 80c. outmdc. ‘ Buckwheatâ€"53 to 550, outsulc. Bran-Manitoba. $22.50 to $23, in bags. Toronto freight. Shorts, $25.50 to $26. The Great West fisheries of B. 0.. whose head oitlcc is 515 Sayward Building. Victoria. B. 0., is a concern which will bear the closest investigation. It controls, through license. vast areas of valuable fishing waters in Northern British Columbia. Country Produce. Butterâ€"Rolls. choice, 26 to 27c; bakers‘. inferior. 22 to 2-10; choice dairy, tubs, 260; Fvol- Bond is “warn-pd q “inst creamery, 30 to 51:: for rolls, and 28 to 290 J ‘v l ‘ g for solids. i loss of principal to the investor, EWS“CRSG MS of noW-lfi'id- 3% Der through the Granite Securities dozen; fresh. 27 to 280. .1 1 . 1 . 1 Cheeseâ€"14120 for large, and 14 3-40 for Cc“: “ 1050 .3559 5 '"H I “up “5 behind this issue is $400000. twins. Beansâ€"Handpicked. 83 per bushel; One hundred shares of com- mon stock are set aside against primes. $2.90. in a jabbing way. Honeyâ€"Extracted. in fins. 12 to 121-20 every bowl as a Bonus. and from whi" the holder draws not 1b. for.No. 1, wholesale; combs. $2.50 dividends. while the Profits in to $3. wholesale. Poultryâ€"Chickens, 14 to 16¢: per 1b.; fowl. this industry are large. being about 100%. 11 to 15c; ducks. 1430 16c; geese. 13 to 140: turkeys. 22 to 240. Live poultry, about 2c lower than the above. Potatoesâ€"900 per bag. on track. Provisions. Baconâ€"{mug clear, 151-4 to 151-2c per 1b.. in case lots. Porkâ€"Short cut, $26 to $27; do. moss. $21.50 to $22. Hamsâ€"Medi- um 10 light. 17 to 171-2c; heavy, 151-2 to 16o: rolls. 141-2 to 150; breakfast bacon. 18c; hacks, 211-2c. ‘ Lal‘(l-'l‘i(‘rc('s. 141-Zc; tubs. 14 3-40; pails, 15c. YOU CANNOT MAKE A MORE SAFE INVESTMENT THAN THIS. ALL DBBENTURBS ARE ISSUED V IN DENOMINATIONS OF $100.00 EACH. AND ARE BEING OFFER- ED TO THE PUBLIC AT $95.00, ON TERMS OF 1/._. CASH, BAL- ANCE 60 AND 90 DAYS. Galen Hay and Straw. Balcd Have-No. 1 at $14 to $14.50.. on track. Toronto; No. 2, $12 to $12.50. Mixed hay is quoted at $10 to $11 a ton. on track. Balcd Strawâ€"$10, on track, Toronto. Live Stock Markets. Montreal. Nov. 12.-The top price realized for the best steers was $6 and the lower grndrs down to 33.75, while the best. bun-hers cows sold at $4.50 and the com- mon and inferior from $5 to $4 per owt. Canning stock. 52 to $2.25 for bulls and at $1.50 to $2.50 for cows per cwt. Sheep and lambs. $3.50 to $4 and the latter at. $6 to 86.25 per cwt. Calves from :53 to $10 each. as to size and quality. Selected loés of hogs. $8.50 to $8.75 per cwt.. weighed For the convenience of the small 0 cars. Toronto, Nov. 12.â€"Cattle-Choice butcher. inVCBtOT W6 Bil-VG placed an issue of $5.75 to $6.10: export. $6 to 86-55: 800d ‘ common stock on sale; these shares 100.096 Shares of common Treaq sury Stock are aiso Placed on ' the Market at Gne Dollar per Share. medium. 85 to $5.60; common. $3.75 to :54; , - cows, $3 to $5; bulls. $3 to $450; cannerg. are non-assessable, and when paid $1.50 to $2. Calvee*Good veal. S7 to $9; for are fully paid up. havmg a par value of $1.00. these can be had on common, $5.50 to $6. Shockers and Feed- ersâ€"Steele. 350 to 1,050 pounds. at $5.25 to , terms of 50c. down per share, bal- ance 60 and 90 days. $5.50; feeding bulls. 300 to 1,200 pounds, at 82.75 to $4.25. Milken and springer-aâ€" From 850 to $80. Sheep and lambsâ€"-nght ewes. 84 to $4.25; heav ewes. 83 to $3.50: lambs. $5.50 to $6.25. eggâ€"458.15 to $8.20 fed and watered, and $7.90 I. o. b. lb.â€" A small bag containing $475 was stolen at a Toronto branch .post- office. Address all Applications to R. swonns, s15 Sayward Bldg... VICTORIA, B. c.

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