W M... s . . '* ‘Y‘f‘w-‘w'. a». -~ 7.- 4- c. cu... ..,-~,N_.,_-,,m,_._. ., , ' v v r r'wv, AIM‘~=-v‘u-w W. ‘ em" we. . «2-: . v. w .mmv-es’m..ds1.44h’vs~~~.c.am-n.....s.-mm.,- . r v A DASH PROM_}_0RIANOPLE Turks Lost Six Guns and On the Bennett Burleigh, in a series of de- spatches to The London Daily Tele- graph from Mustapha Pasha, de- scribes the progress of events around Adrianople. .In a sally on Saturday morning the Turks lost six guns, which were captured by lthe Bul arians, and also left many thousan s of dead on the ï¬eld. The enemy tried to break towards the southeast, hoping to escape by ra- pid marching along unfrequented A despatch fcom London says routes towards Tchatalja. The Turks seem incapable of realizing their truly desperate straits, and that the battle power has gone from their hands. The Bulgarians are now within ï¬eld-gun range of many parts of the town. Their military engineers have adopted an admirable system of constructing and placing their siege works. These are so many self-enclosed independent camps, placed so as to command the ap- proaches to the city as well as the exits. They can, in attack or de- fence, oo-operate'with the neigh- boring camps behind and all around the enclosing circuits of the besieg- ers’ work. These camps are almost impossible nuts to crack in any sally. There are lines of barbed wire everywhere. The morale of the besieging troops is splendid. Tra- velllers in vehicles are coming from Jildrim towards the Bulgarian camps on the southwest. It is stated that negotiations are proceeding at Adrianople with a] view to saving needless waste of iife. The Turks have been told that the town will otherwise be taken by bombardment or assault unless it is surrendered. The terms will be dis- cussed for a day or so. In the cap- ture of Marash and its works a few days ago the Turks left three thou- sand dead upon the ï¬eld, but suc- ceeded in carrying most of their wounded into the town, which must now be in a frightfully insanitary condition and in privation. The streets from Mustapha Pasha to the front are being regularly cleansed and repaired, under Bulgarian di- rection, by the peasants. Arrived Too Late. A‘despatch from Soï¬a. says: Near- ly one thousand Bulgarian reserv- ists from the United States arrived hereon Saturday. Their enthusi- asm was dampened by the an- nouncement that they would 'very probably not be permitted to go to the front. Some of them have al- ready started for their homes in the provinces. Twelve hundred Turkish prisoners have been brought here. A Massacre ls Feared. A despatch from Soï¬a says: King Ferdinand has decided not to enter Constantinople if he takes the Tchataldja lines, because of. a fear that a massacre of Christians will occur before he can secure full con- trol of the city and feel sure of keeping order. Fear of a cholera lague‘ aided him in this decision. Ferdinand’s Government favors his decision. M. Natchovitch, Bulgar- ian Foreign Minister, in an inter- view with the correspondent of the None Freie Presse, said that Bul- garia wants Constantinople and Salonica made free cities, and that the Bulgarian army will halt before Ithe gates of Constantinople and leave the fate of the Turkish ca- pital to the powers. The Balkan allies at Salonioa are displaying a ï¬ne crop of petty jealousics. The Bulgarians who followed the Greeks into that city wired to King Ferdinand that the city was now under his rule, there- by stirring in the breasts of the Greeks a feeling that due credit had not been given to them. I Wounded Left to Die. A despateh from London says: From the accounts of correspon- dents on the Bulgarian side, their wounded are in just as bad condi- tion as the Turks. One correspon- dent in describing the poor ambu- lance servico of the Bulgarians, whose wounded are driven for miles in iolting oxen carts, says this is not the worst part of their suï¬erings. He continues :7â€" “After several battles the woun- ded were left lying on the bare ï¬elds where they had fallen for two or three hot days and bitterly cold nights, and the worst sights in the hospitals are the rows of poor fol- lows with swollen and gsngrened limbs, for whom there is no hope of recovery.†The correspondent adds that -. . a... sC«-£'*» ‘ï¬r.".’..>.‘1.\s r. m»... ‘,,,,,_,‘,._.,,_,y, _. ,v ,. V. a“: at...“ 0 Left Thousands of Dead Field. , many are dying from exposure and not from wounds. Grim Toll at Ycuidjc. A despatch from Athens says: It is announced that 35,000 Turks were engaged in the battle against the Greeks at Yenidje. They had 42 heavy guns. The Turkish losses numbered 2,000 killed, 500 made prisoners and 22 guns captured. The Greek losses were 500 killed and wounded, including ï¬fteen of- licers. *â€" Six Thousand Mussacred. A despatch from Athens says: Six thousand women and children, 25 men and two priests have been massacred in the neighborhood_of Janina by 750 men of the Turkish infantry and 300 Bashi-Bazouks, who pillaged and set ï¬re to the v11- lages. Murderous Fighting. A despatch from Bulgarian head- quarters says: After four days’ murderous ï¬ghting, the Bulgarian army has succeeded in breaking through the Turkish position at Tchatalja in the centre of the lines and completely rolling up the Turk- ish defence. The Bulgarian ad- vance is being pushed forward with the greatest energy with the view of forcing the Turkish troops away from Constantinople. Cholera Stops Bulgaria. A despatch from London says: Cholera at Tchataldja and Constan- tinople is doing more than all the men under Nazim Pasha to stop the march of. the‘Bulgars. Eye-witness- es tell of horrible scenes in the be- leaguered forts, where hundreds of bodies of victims of the disease are piled into shallow trenches. It is doubtful if. King Ferdinand will risk the lives of any more of his men by marching them into a plague-stricken city, and there is a report that already many of the Bulgarian troops have been strickâ€" en with cholera, which they caught in positions from which they had routed the diseased Turks. A Constantinople despatch to the Cologne Gazette declares that Bul- garia has abandoned her intentions to enter Constantinople, being thus advised by Russia and Great Bri- tain. Altogether, although the re- port that an armistice already has been arranged has not been con- ï¬rmed, all indications point in that direction, and it may be supposed that the terrible conditions of fam- ine and destitution prevailing among the refugees in the neighbor- hood of Constantinople, which are calculated to provide a hotbed for the spread of cholera, may have had something to do with Bulgaria’ s de- cision. Constantinople still waits her fate in the calm of despair. So far, in spite of alarmist reports, there has been no great disorder there. 6‘ ENGINE BOILER EXPLODES. _â€"â€"â€"- Fireman Fatally Hurt and Engineer Critically Injured. A despatch from Hamilton says: Two men were injured, one fatally and the other critically, and several persons were shaken up early on Friday, when the engine of G.T.R. train No. 11, an accommodation running between Niagara Falls and Windsor, exploded at the “Y†near the Desjardins Canal. The victims were zâ€"Gcorge E. Cook, engineer, Niagara Falls, Out, aged 55 years, badly scolded about the breast, face and hands, lacerated about the shoulders, and suffered from shock, will probably recover; Samuel Sault, ï¬reman, Niagara Falls, N. Y., aged 38. right leg crushed, had to be amputated at the knee; skull fractured; terribly scaldcd about the upper portion of the body. Taken to City Hospital, where he died at 1.30 in the afternoon. I‘â€"_â€"__ MILLINERY STO CK BURNED. $35,000 Damage Done by Fire in flat Works at London. A dcspatch from London, Ont., says: Fire that is said to have start- ed in rubbish about the heating plant at the Wright Hat Company’s warehouse in Ridout Street Satur- day afternoon caused damage esti- mated at. about $35,000. Between $20,000 and $25,000 of this was to the heavy millinery stock, while the remainder was to the plant and equipment. Insurance was carried to the extent of about half of the total loss. uh -'. "Qt~‘ vol-«k a’ TURKISH BA: _ This is a photograph of the Sultan's warship daring Grecian torpedo boat that escaped unscathed. i:...~.- BY A GREUiAh ‘i pursue. Feth-l-Bulcnd, which was blown up and sunk by a It is_probable scores of men forming the crew, if not several hundred, were drowned, as the vessel sank in ï¬ve minutes. mm of flu PANAMA THE PANAMA CANAL lOLLS savour: mom “ms Lssnmu runs centers or AMERICA. 5â€"â€" "kms of culls. Grain. Choose and mm: "was. a! Home and Aaron. Broadstufls. Toronto. Nov. 19.â€"Flour-â€"Nlnety er cent. patents, $4 to $4.10. Manltobas. 5.- 50 for ï¬rst patents. $5 for seconds. ind $4.80 for strong bakers'. Manitoba Wheatâ€"No. 1 Northern, 931-2c. Bay poms; No. 2 at 910; and No. 5 at 890. Bay ports. Feed wheat. 65 to o'lc, Bay ports. Ontario Wheatâ€"No. 2 new white and red wheat. 96 to 970. outside. and, sprouted. 80 to 85c. outside. Oatsâ€"No. 3 Ontario. 35 to 370. outside, and 40c. on track. Toronto. Wes;ern Canada oats noted at 421-20 cash for No. 2 and 411-20 or No. 5. Peasâ€"No. 2 at $1.10 to $1.15. Barleyâ€"Forty-eight-lb. barley of good quality. 65 to 70¢, outside. Cornâ€"No. 2 old American. 651-20. ail- raii, Toronto, and No. 3 at 641-20. all-rail. No 3, Bay ports, 611-20. New corn. De- cember delivery; 560, Tomato. Ryeâ€"No. 2 at 80 to 82c, outside. Buckwheatâ€"52 to 55s, outside. Bran-Manitoba bran, $22.50 to $23. in l‘apags. Toronto freight. Shorts. $22.50 to ‘1 s V Country Produce. Butterâ€"Rolls. choice, 26 to 270; bakers', inferior. 22 to 240: choice. dairy tubs, 260; creamery. 31 to 32c for rolls, and 28 to 290 for solids. Eggsâ€"Case lots of fresh, 520 per dozen, and of cold storage,‘ 26 to 280; strictly new-laid, 40 to 45c per dozen. Cheeseâ€"1412c for large, and 14 3-40 for twms. , Beansâ€"Handpicked. $3 per bushel: primes. $2.90. in a jabbing way. Honeyâ€"Extracted. in tins, 12 to 121-20 per lb. for No. 1. wholesale; combs, S2 50 to $3. wholesale. Poultryâ€"Well-fatted, clean. dry-picked stock was quoted as follows:â€"Chickens, 14 to 15c per lb: fowl. 11 to Lie; ducks. 14 to 160; geese. 13 to 140: turkeys, 22 to 24c. Live poultry, about 2o lower than the above. Potatoesâ€"Good stock quoted at 80 to 90c per bag on track. Provlslons. Baconâ€"Long clear, 151-4 to 151-20 per lb.. in case lots. Porkâ€"Short out. $26 to $27; do.. mess, $21.50 to $23. Hamsâ€"Medi-l um to light, 17 to 171-2c: heavy, 151-2 to Merchant Vessel Rate To Be $I.2o Per Net Ton Carrying Capacity. A despatch from Washington says: President Taft on Wednesday night issued a proclamation ï¬xing the rates that the foreign shipping of the world shall pay for passage through the Panama Canal. The proclamation, made under author- ity of the canal act passed by Con- gress in August, establishes a. mer- chant vessel rate of $1.20 per net ton of actual carrying capacity, with a reduction of 40 per cent. on ships in ballast. The provisions of the proclama- tion are as follows: 1. On merchant vessels carrying passengers or cargo, $1.20 per net vessel tonâ€"each 100 cubic footâ€"of actual earning capacity. 2. On vessels in ballast without passengers er cargo, 40 per cent. less than the rate of tolls for vessels with passengerslor cargo. 3. Upon naval vessels, other than A SANITARIAN CLUB. For Charitable ~W0rk Among the Consumptivc Poor. Toronto has a modest and unique charity organization known as the Samaritan Club, the members be- ing ladies who have banded together for work among the consumptive poor. The main idea is one which might be adopted in every town and village throughout Canada, while even in the tiniest settlement any Christian woman who feels a call 160; rolls. 141-2 to 15c; breakfast‘bacon. constitute herself a. Samaritan Club 18c; backs. 211-2c. 1512::ircl-â€"’1‘ierces. 141-20: tubs, 14 3-40: pails, Balsd Hay and Straw. Baled Hayâ€"No 1 at $14 to $14.50 on! lowing committees: track, Toronto: No. 2, $12 to $12.50. Mixed hay. $10 to $11 a ton, on track. Baled Straw-$10. on track, Toronto. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Nov. 19.-â€"0ats â€"â€" Canadian Western. No. 2, 461-2 to 470; extra No. 1 feed, 46 to 461-2c. Barley- Man. feed, 61 to 620: malting. 78 to 800. Buckwheat- No. 2. 55 to 56¢. , Flourâ€"Man. spring wheat. patents, ï¬rsts. $5 50: seconds. 35.10: strong bakers', $4.90; winter patents, choice, 65.- 35: straight rollers, $4.95 to $500: straight rollers. bags, $2.30 to $2.40. Rolled oats. barrels. $5.05: (10.. bags, 90 lbs.. $2.40. Bran, 525. Shorts, $26 to $27. Mlddlings, $28 to $30. Mouillie, $30 to 835. Ray, No. 2 per ton, car lots, 13 to 151-20. Cheese. ï¬nest westerns, 12 7-8 to 13c; finest easterns, 121-2 to 12 34c. Butter. choicest creamcry. 501-4 to 301-20; seconds. 28 6-4 to 290. Eggs. se- lected, 31 to ‘32c; No. 2 stock, 21 to 220. Potatoes, per bag. car lots. 80 to 850. United states Markets. Minneapolis. Nov. 19.â€"Wheatâ€"December, 8414c; May. 80 3-40: No. 1 Northern. 6714c; No. 2 do., 83 to 84 3â€"4c. Cornâ€"No. 3 yellow, 59 to 600. Oatsâ€"No. 3 white. 29 to 291-20. Ryeâ€"No. 2. 51 to 606. Branâ€"$18 to $18.50. Flourâ€"First patents, 84.35 to $4.65: second patents, $4.20 to $4.45: ï¬rst clears. $3.20 to $3.50; second clears. $2.40 to $2.70. Duluth, Nov. 19.â€"Wheatâ€"â€"No. 1 hard. 863-8c: No. 1 Northern. 855-80: No. 2 do., 83 3-8c; December, 84 “lo; May, 89 3-8c bid. Linseed-0n track and to arrive, 31.4054; November, 51.39141 bid: December, $1.33 bliszanuary, 81561-2 asked; May, $1.39 as e . les Sicâ€"câ€"k barren. Montreal. Nov. 19.â€"Stecrs, 83.75 to $6 per cwt. Some choice cows brought $4.50. and the common sold at 33 to $4, while the bulls, which were principally cannera' stock. sold at from $2 to $3.25 per cwt. Lambs sold at $6 to $6.25 and sheep at $4 per cwt., whilo canes brought from 83 to $12 each. as to size and quality. Hogsâ€"$8.50 to 88.65 per cud... weighed 011 cars. Toronto, Nov. 19,â€"Good to choice butch- ers brought from $5.25 to $5.90, medium at from $4.50 to $5.00. Good butcher cows ranged from $4.75 to 85.00. with common to mediums at from $3.50 to $4.60. and can- ncrs at from $2 55 to 33.00. Fair to medi- um bulls went at from $3.35 to $4.25. Milk- ers and springers. $50 to 380. Light. stock- ers went at $3.75 to $4.00 per hundred- wcight. Lambs ranged from 86.15 to $6.40: light ewes from $4.00 to $5.50: bucks and culls from $2.00 to 83.50: good calves from $700 to 89.00, with roughs at from $3.- 571-2 to $6.00. Hogs. $8.10; $8.00 was paid for the most part, on the fed and water- ed basis. _____._>Z<..___._â€" 110G CHOLERA SPREADS. Fifty More Animals Slain on Farms in Amherstburg vicinity. A deepstch from Windsor says: Since the destruction of a herd of 85 high-class hogs, found suffering with hog cholera, near Amherst- burg last week, 50 more hogs have been killed on farms in the immedi- ate neighborhood. of one, and ï¬nd effective work to do in her neighborhood. The T0- ,ronto ladies have formed the fol- to help less fortunate sisters can The Supply Committee, to provide clothing for consumptive and their families. The Nourishment Committee, to pro- vide milk, eggs, and other neces- sities and delicacies for patients at their homes, and soup for weak and hungry patients at the free dispen- sary. The Welfare Committee, for delivering twenty minute talks on transports, collicrs, hospital ships and supply ships, 50 cents per dis- placement ton. ' 4. Upon army and navy trans- ports, colliers, hospital ships and supply ships, $1.20 per net ton, the vessels to be measured by the same rules as are employed in determin- ing the net tonnage of merchant vessels. “The Secretary of War will pre- pare and prescribe such rules for the measurement of vessels and such regulations as may be neces- sary and proper to carry this pro- clamation into full force and efâ€" fect.†American coastwise shipping was exempted from toll payment by Congress. It was to this provision of the act that Great Britain diplo- matically protested, but no refer- ence to the incident is made in the President's proclamation. tion at places where ten or more girls are employed, thus spreading a knowledge of the disease and its prevention. _ -â€"-â€"-â€">p---â€"‘ MAN IIURLED TO DEATH. â€"â€" Oliver Polricr Caught in Slmfting in Cornwall Mill. A despatch from Cornwall says: Oliver Poirier, aged about sixty- two, met a horrible death in the basement of the weave shed of the Canada Mill here on Thursday af- ternoon, when he was in the act of oiling the shafting. His clothing caught in the shafting, and before . the speed could be shut off he was dead. Both arms, both legs, his neck and every rib were broken, while his body was a mass of bruises. Poirier was born near Co- teau, Que., and is survived by his mother, his wife, two sisters and two brothers. lsâ€"m Mr. E. A. Lancaster, M.P., in- tends to ï¬ght to the last the assess- ment on his Parliamentary allow- the cure and avoidance of consumpâ€" I ance. _ _ __ __..________.______.__.._._.__ ....__. NINE PERSONS DROWNED Old Mayflower Springs Leak ln Madawaska River Near Barry’s Bay, and Sinks. A desp'atch from Ottawa says: Nine lives are believed to have been lost in the Madawaska River on Tuesday night soon after 7 o’clock, when the old wheel steam- er Mayflower, a small 50-foot boat, capsized and sank three miles out of Barry’s Bay, after springing a leak. Of the twelve people aboard, ten of whom were passengers and two members of the crew, thus passengers, namely, Gordon '3. Peverley, J. S. Imlach and M. J. Harper, all of Ottawa, and com-' mercial travelers, are alive to tell! the story of the terrible disaster.. They were found by a search party! who rowed out from Barry’s Bayl to an island about three miles down the river, in a very exhausted con- dition. From the brief story of the dis- aster that could be obtained from the three survivors, they say that the Mayflower sprang a leak soon after she left Barry’s Bay. Her hold rapidly ï¬lled with water, and those on board quickly realized that death was imminent. There was hardly a moment to decide on how their lives could be saved. A howl- ing wind was sweeping down over the river, which is nearly a mile wide at the point where the boat sprang a leak, and the water was lashing the sides of the ill-fated boat with a vengeance. All around was black. Not a light could be seen any- little, a little more and then ter- , ribly, when the old coal-oil lamps went out by being crashed to the floor, and in a few minutes when, all was in darkness the boat keeled over broadside and sank suddenly, throwing passengers, crew, freight and all, of which there was a good deal aboard, and machinery, into the icy water. The wooded shores throw back the echoes of the cries of‘the drowning souls. The three survivors were able to discern some spars of timber floating near to where they had been hurled into the water. Each tried to cheer the other with words of encouragement, and-half perished in water that was clogged with ice, and almost numb- ed to the point of unconsciousness they drifted ashore, but more dead than alive. Words, they say, could not de- scribe those hours of suffering on the island up to the time they were found. They were too exhausted to walk, or even to get to their feet. Throughout the long, cold night, and terrible, even colder day, in a blinding snow storm, they waited and prayed that help would come to them. Death seemed in- evitable until at last, when hope seemed practically gone, they heard the quiet swish of oars and the sound of human voices, and from that moment from sheer joy they remembered nothing more until they awoke in a house with kind faces around them and kind hand: where. The boat began to lurch a to attend to their wants. “WW ~<ew â€"-â€"..~W . Mawwmmnesmra; a.†....-_,.. ~mum“... .W . _,,..., m , an ~. * A .â€" .. . 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