hours. 90 per cent., $3.80 to $3.85. sea- > en for No.’1.‘and"$2 for No. 2. j-‘M‘c-JMWox-in‘auaw. .u. .,«A.-..,.... ' , ‘-‘v;.’.,t_-~:_ ;.~,-. ~‘-. ~ ... . l , Breadstufl’s. Toronto. May 12.â€"0ntario ers'. in jute bags. $4. Manitoba wheatâ€"Bay portsâ€"No. 1 Northern. 97c, and No. 2 at 9510. Oatsâ€"No. 2 Ontario oats. 32b to 400. outside. and at 42c, on track, Toronto. at 391c for No. 3. Bay ports. Peasâ€"~Prices nominal. Barleyâ€"Good malting barley. 56 to .580, according to quality. Ryeâ€"No. 2 ,at 63 to 640. outside. ABuckwheatâ€"â€"-80c. outside. Cornâ€"No. 3 American. 74} to 75c. all rail, Toronto. . Branâ€"Manitoba bran. $25 to $26 a ton, in bags. Toronto freight. Shorts. $26 to $28. - Country Produce. . Butterâ€"Choice dairy, 18 to 200: in- ferior, 16 to 161m; -farmers' separator prints. 21 to 23¢; creamery prints. fresh. 25 to 260; do.. storage prints. 23 to 24c; solids. storage, 21 to 230. Eggsâ€"21 to 22¢ pe!r dozen, in case lots. Honeyâ€"Extracted. in tins. 101 to 11¢ per lb. Combs, $2.25 to $2.50 per dozi- .-Cheeseâ€"-New cheese. 14!. to '15c' for per bushel; primes, $2.10 to $2.15. 1, Poultryâ€"~Fowl, 16 to 18c per 1b.; ,chickens. .19 to, 20c;~_ducks, 17 to ,180; 'geese, 15 to 160: turkeys. 20 to 230. Potatoesâ€"Delawares at $1 to $1.05. on-track. here. ‘ I Provisions. ‘ Baconâ€"Long clear. 15 to 160 per 1b.. {in case lots. Hamsâ€"Medium. 18 to lISlc: do.. heavy. 17 to 180: rolls. 15 to @1530: breakfast bacon. 18 to 190; backs. F22 to 240. Wholesale seed merchants are selling recleaned seeds to the trade, on the 100- 1b. basiszâ€"Red clover. No. 1. $19 to $21; do.. No. 2, $17 to $17.50; alslke. No. 1. $20.50 to $21: do.. No. 2. $17 to $18: Timothy. No. 1. $8.50 to $9.50; do.. No. 2, $7 to $7.25; alfalfa. No. 1. $14 to $15: do.. No. 2. $13 to $13.50. Montreal Markets. Montreal, May 12.â€"â€"Corn, American No. 2 yellow. 76!; to 770. Oats. Cana- dian Western, No. 2.’ 42% to 430: No. 3. i Lardâ€"Tierces. 123c: tubs. 13c: pails. 131a. Seeds. MW.â€" CANADA’S NEXT GOVERNOR. Queen Mary’s Brother to Succeed the Duke of Counaught. 'A despatch from London says: Prince Alexander of Teck, third son of the late Duke of Teck, is to sucâ€" ceed the Duke of Connough-t as Governor-General of Canada. His Serene Highness Prince'Alex- ander Augustus Frederick George cf chk, G.C.B., G.C.V.O., was born April 14, 1874, married 1904 Her Royal Highness Princess Alice of Albany, daughter of the late‘ Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, youngest son of Queen Victoria. Their children are: Princess May Helen Emma, born Jan. 23, 1906. Prince Rupert Alexander George Augustus, born Aug. 24, 1907. Prince Alexander of Teck is a brother of Queen Mary. He will take up his duties in October, at the expiration of the term of the Duke of Connoaught. The Prince is a. keen soldier, but he has had little administrative experience. He is, however, a. hard worker and a good organizer. He has done much in the cause of charity, especially in behalf of hospitals and in the fur- therance of cancer research. The Princess of Teck is a. great favorite. and she is unanimously voted the prettiest and the best dressed of the British Royal Prinâ€" oesseas. Prince Alexander, who is a. major in the Second Life Guards, served in the Matubeleland campaign and in South Africa for two years, and to his other titles added that of the Distinguished Service Order, which, next to the Victoria Cross, is the chief ambition of the military men in Great Britain. How Princess of Teck Ranks. The exact rank of the Princesses of Teck is rather an interesting question. In England they rank in practice immediately after the daughters of the Duke of Fife, to whom the late King Edward gave. a. deï¬nite precedence immediately af- ter those of the Royal Family, who hear the title of Royal Highness. But the Tecks are merely a ducal fluidly, although they bear the title of Prince. The late Duke of Teck was given the title of “Highness†by Queen Victoria in the jubilee year of 1887, but apparently this title was a purely personalone and did not descend" to his children. The Almanaoh do Gothsâ€"the recog- nized euthOrity on such mattersâ€" places the Princes both of Tack and Battenberg in its third part, along with the other British and foreign dukes. 7 415 to 42c. Barley. Man. feed. 50 to ï¬le. Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents. ï¬rsts. $3.60; selconds. $510; shtrpng st‘miZKgri. .90: W nter a on s, c 0 cc. . 0 “am and at s3-85 ‘0 $330.- T°r°m°- 35.90; straightprollers. $4.70 to $4.90; Manitobaâ€"First patents. in Jute bags. do_ bags. $2.20 to $2_35_ $5.60; do.. seconds. $5.10; strong bak- baxirelsl $4.50 to $4.55. bags. 90 lbs.. $2.12; to $23. Shorts $25. Middiings $28. Moul- » lie 28 to $32. Key. No. 2. per ton, car Ontario wheatâ€"No. 2 {it $1.02. outâ€" lots? $14 to $15. Cheese. ï¬nest west. “lde' and 51'“- on two!" Toromo- erns. 12ic; ï¬nest easterns. 12c. Butter. choicest oreamery. 23 2 . , f e h. 22 120 23c: 88‘ weStern Canada oats' 41" for NO' 2.- ‘md fecttgd.222l52: Egg; sfogk. 23c. Potatoes per bag. car lots. $1 to $1.15. Spring wheat. No. 1 Northern. 02h: No. 2 Northern, 9030; No. 3 Northern. 8380: No. 4, 850; No. 5, 790: No. 6. 74c: feed. 690: No. 1 rejected seeds. 88c; No. 2 re- jected seeds. 86c; No. 3 rejected seeds. 83%; No. 1 smutty. 88c; No. 2 smutty. 860: No. 3 smutty. 831a Winter wheat â€"No. 1. 9230: No. 2, 9030; No, 3. 883a Oatsâ€"No. 2 C.W.. 37tc; extra No. 1 feed. 35ic; No. 2 feed. 34c. . 47c:_No. 4, 460; rejected. 455C; feed. 430. flagâ€"{Na 1 N.-W.C.. $1.362; No. 2 C.Vv.. 892m; July. 901m No. 1 hard. 9420: No. '1‘Northern, 911 to 92cc: No. 2 Northern. 892 ‘t0‘915w Corn-e-No. 3 > 650. Oatsâ€"No. 3,-white. 301 to 36%. Flour and bran unchanged. $1.572; July. $1.58!.- No. 1 hard. 9320: No. 1 Northern. 923a; large. and 15 to 2155c for'twins. 'Beansâ€"Hand-picked. $2.15" to $2.20 . No. 2 Northern, 91ic: July. 9210. Rolled oats, Rolled oats. $2 . 15. Bran to 231m seconds. Winnipeg Grain. A Winnipeg, May 12.â€"â€"Cashâ€"-Wheatâ€"â€" Barleyâ€"No. 3 United States Markets. Minneapolis. May 12.â€"Wheatâ€"May. ye11_ow.- 641 ‘to Duluth. Minn.. May 12.â€"Linsecd. cash. -. Wheatâ€"Close, Ialvo Stock Markets. Toronto. May 12.â€"â€"Cattleâ€"â€"Choioe butâ€" chers. $8.30to $8.40: good, $7.90 to $8.25; common cows. $5 to $5.25: can- ners and cutters. $3.60 to $4; choice fat cows. $6.50 to $7.25; choice bulls. $7 to $7.50. Calvesâ€"Good veal. $8.75 'to $10; com- mon. $4.75 to $7. - Stockers and feedersâ€"Steers. 800 to 900 pounds. $7.25 to "$7.50: good qual- ity. 700 to 800 pounds. $7 to $7.50: light. $6.25 to $7.25. Sheep and lambsâ€"Light ewes. $6.50 to $7; heavy. $5.75 to $6.25; bucks. $5.75 to $8.25: Spring lambs. each. $6 to $10: yearling lambs. $9 to $9.50. but with 750 per head deducted for all the buck lambs. Hogsâ€"$8.65. fed and watered: $8.90, of: cars: $8.30. f.o.b. Montreal, May 12.â€"Prlme beeves. 7.3. to sac; medium. 51 to 71c: milkmen’s strippers. 5b to.-7c; common. 4?: to 530: miich cows, $30 to $80 each; calves. 3 to 70: sheep. 5 to 60: yearling lambs. to Sc: spring lambs. $4 to $6 each; hogs. about 92c. ‘ ATONES FOR MURDER. Frank Haynes Was Hanged at Syd- neyâ€"Killed Hotel Proprietor. A despatch from Sydney, N.S., say-s: Frank Haynes expiated for the murder of B. S. Atkinson on the scaffold Friday afternoon at 5.41. Haynes made a full written con- fession of his crime in the presence of‘Jailer Karn and Captain Fullerâ€" ton. On the night of the 15th of Aug- ust last the body of Benjamin S. Atkinson, proprietor of the Mi-nto Hotel, Sydney, and a well-known honseman, was found on the road, eight miles from the city. Atkinâ€" son had a bungalow at Mira, and the original supposition was that he had been killed as a result of his horse having bolted. There were a - number of suspicious circumstances connected with the case, however, and the arrest of Haynes followed the investigation of these. Haynes who was supposed to have been a native of Nevada, only arrived in Sydney in the early summer of last year. He had been on intimate terms with Mrs. Atkinson, the wife of the murdered man. _.._____.»1«___. ALMOST A WRECIL “Ocean Limited†Train Just In Time. A despatch from Truro, N.S., says: An attempt to wreck the Ocean Limited train from Montreal to Halifax was made at Bible Hill, about one mile west of Truro, on Tuesday night. The Limited, 40 minutes late, was speeding about 50 miles an hour. when the driver saw a tie lying across the track. Quickly applying the air brakes he stopped the train, but not until the tie was shoved ahead of the engine for a. hundred feet. The matter is being investigated. Stopped .â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€">!‘ HAD NARROW ESCAPE. Young Man Hurlcd to Brink of 150- Foot Fails. Owen Sound, May lO.â€"â€"-Yesterday afternoon. Victor Inglis, eldest son of W..A. Inglis-proprietor of In- glis’ mills, had a narrow. escape from death when he was hurled a distance of 20. feet to the very brink of the 150 feet of Cataract and falls which form pictuires'que’lngiis Falls. low he was able to get ashore be- fore being swept over the falls to certain death. He sustained three broken ribs and a. severe shaking- up. on All Over Canada. Prospects are for a busy year in the building trade in Toronto. Grazmg land in the West has been leased to a company for a nominal sum, according to a. state- ment by the Minister of Militia. The yellow fish peaches, such as Crawfords, have been killed for this season by the cold winter, in the Niagara. district. Linus Woolverton of Grimsby, one of the most prominent fruit-growers m Canada, died after only four hours’ illness, at the age of sixty- eight. Frank Haynes, under sentence of death at Sydney, N.S., for murder, has confessed and John Donald and Mrs. Atkinson, widow of the mur- dered mam, have been arrested. On complaint of the manager of the street railway company, that Albert Resume, hotelman of Sandâ€" wich, had sold liquor to a. car crew on duty, Reaume-was ï¬ned $10 and costs. , ' - rThe Princess. Louise cables the Duke of Connaught that she is deep- ly touched bythe many cablegrams of condolences from Canada. on the ‘ death of her husband the Duke of Cornelius Vanderbilt, Argyll. . Inspector-General in the New York The Int-ema- "0‘D&1 JO-im’l Commis‘ State National Guard. Mr. Van- SiO-n. meeting with? Mlcmg‘im 300» derbilt has announced his readiness arppl'oved the arpplmal’ï¬l'o‘n 0’5 the to go on active service in Mexico. Micmgan Northern PO‘WOI' 00-, and __________________________. the Algoma Steel Corporation of _ H ‘ -‘ ‘ Sault Ste. Marie, Out, to erect BILL 10 ABOLISH “(IPPING- compensating works at a point in â€"“ St. Mary’s River between the two Senator Davis Seeks to Put an End citieï¬ . to “Dcmoralizing†System. T135 d'fï¬wlge fï¬ï¬usgzgazzbï¬iylg; disturbance, .towards the sea to month if Senator Davis, Prince Al- A'cn‘ea’le’ which escade da’ma’ge' be ‘t, and a number of other Senaâ€" The ama’ 0f the zone m d‘e'n'sf‘f'ly tois and members of Parliament poplfl‘wted’ a'bo‘ul’ 10’000 P901319 11"" i-ng 1n .2). number of small Villages. 8 have their way, and it looks as if a, they might. Senator Davis’ bill, which provides for a ï¬ne or impri- sonment for tipping, and picking the employer, the employee and the person offering the gratuity liable, was given Second 1'94â€de it“ the A despatch from Montreal says: Semth 9n. Wed‘DQSdM’g Final results posted on Wednesday 111, mOYl‘ng the ,r'e‘fnl‘mg Senator in the faculty of law at McGill for Dam? said ‘t‘h'a't “Winn recent years the ï¬rst time in the history of the an. mitOlel'alble Syiï¬bem 0f Petty university contained the name of a brlbmy had grown up 11:11 0701‘ the representative of the fair sex. Mrs. World, known 355119 “piling SY'SlIem~ A. M. Langstaff, the ï¬rst woman It had become SllCIll 3: nuisance that to present herself as a, oandidlame AT McGILL LAW SCHOOL. Woman Ranks Fourth Among Eighteen Getting Degree. Items of News by" Wire Notes of interest as to What is Going it was time it was grappled with by legislation, and he believed his bill would have the support of ninety per cent. of the people of the counâ€" try, 'who were new subject to a growing scale of graft and- tips in order to obtain accommodation and service. A person on a journey had to constantly have his hand in his pocket, and had to bribe his way for the legal profession in this pro- vince, proved successful in all ex- aminations, and ranks fourth among the 18 members of the class who will be granted the degree of B.C.L. at the university convoca- tion Tuesday. It will be up to the Quebec Bar Association to say whe- ther Nor not Mrs. Langstaff shall practice, supposing she desires to from his motor-cycle over a bridge OWing to the water being throughout his trip. The Senator do go. said that tipping had a dcrmo-ralizâ€" >l< mg effect on persons who received , ‘ , , i , , tips. It bad a tendency to pauper_ CROOK I‘LEECED PASSENGERS ize waiters, sons, who should stand on a plane of manhood above the selrvile posi- tion which they were" placed in Until Caught Near North Bay. ties. Employers should pay their young American part of those serving the public. worked passengers on patliized with the object of the bill, and said, “Ever should make him pay twice.†Senators Poitier, Gordon and Cloran all spoke in favor of the bill .__.___»x._ 150 KILLED BY EARTHQUAKE. East Coast of Sicily Victim of Scis- niic Disturbance. disastrous as the one at Messina in 1908_-but for the fact that a. series of sllght shocks forewarned the peo- south of Mount Etna, Friday night. Mount Etna was in eruption at the time, and the belching of the vol- cano- increased in violence yester- day. There are between one and two ed by her brother and herself. thou-sand have been injured. there was“ “3* mm ‘W‘ho Premier Salandra announced in the Chamber of Deputies last even- ing that 150 persons were killed, and still buried beneath the ruins; _ . The preliminary shocks began am As she had not returne from Zafferana, Liner-a, which was the centre of the gendins “he Stairway, powers and Other per' Worked the Short Change Trick A despatch- from North Bay says: through the a'CceP‘t‘am'Ce 0'5 gllaltUi- Charles Crooks, alias Hargraves, a from Iowa, was servants, and opt expect the public sentenced by Judge Valin at North to pay their help. Tipping also (16- Bay to seven months in Central veloped a spirit of arrogance on the Prison on fraud charges. Hargraves express Senator Ross of Middleton symâ€" _______‘____________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"___________.________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_“ . Quebec, May 10.â€"One» of the foul- Rome» May 10-â€"-A11 e‘amthqtick-e, est and most brutal murder-s ever Which might have been equally 8‘5 perpetrated in Quebec was commitâ€" ted here this morning in St. Sauâ€" veur Ward, when Marie Blanche i-e visited thy -“t a t f S'c'l Duboi-s aged 19 years, was beaten ' I p ’ 8 may 00 S 0 1 l y, to death With a hammer in the rear she saw .her daughter lymg m a, pool of the shoe store which was conduct- the World . Great Britain. King George and Queen Mary opened the new wing of the British Museum. _ Gun-running has supplanted cat-l tle-driving as the national pastime} of Ireland. The British House of Lords re- jected the woman’s franchise bill by; a vote of 104 to 60. John Redmond oppose-s any com: promise until the Home Rule bill’. has passed the Lords. ‘ A petition signed by 300,000 has been sent, asking the King not to sign the Home Rule bill until after‘, an election. - ' United States. Bishop Brent, formerly of the‘: Philippines and a native of Ontario, was elected Bishop'of New Jersey. ..-â€".â€"â€"-â€" General. : Two‘ British subjects were killed. by. a bomb during ï¬ghting on the-i Paciï¬c coast of Mexico. Sweeping victories for the rebel! forces in different parts of Mexico were reported to Carranza. " The international book trade and: graphic arts exposition Was opened! at Leflpsic. It oover?lOO acres and} includes twenty buildings, one of‘i them with ï¬ve acres of floor space} King Albert has accepted the; honorary membership of a. dozen: different Belgian pipe-smoking clubs, and will give a pipe for-a} prize in an inter-city pipe smoking tournament. trains, and was convicted on" charges of. defrauding passengers out of $20 on southbound Grand, Trunk Railway, North Bay-Toronto train by the shortchlange trick. He got large bills for small ones by} folding them so ingeniously as l - appear to be double their real; amount. After landing a victim he would leave the train at the ï¬rst} station and take the next train in the opposite direction. The police authorities believe he has been working trains for some Wit-g nesses against him were the victim’ and train crew. ‘ tin... EXPRESS STRUCK BY ROCK. _.â€"- Train Derailed and Several of Din-l ing Car Crew Injured. ‘ A despath from Vancouver; B.C., says: A small rock slidei struck the dining car of the Soo’, express on Wednesday morning at 7’ o’clock, just after the train leftl' North Bend, due in Vancouver at noon. The train was derailed, and! several members of the dining carj crew were injured by scaldls. The rear half of the train was cut off,‘; while the passengers were transfer-l red to the front'end, coming into; Vancouver a few minutes late. ' “'1‘ William Cavern of Montreal was appointed Inspector of Tobacco Factories for the Dominion. Fire Gutted- the main plant of the Canada Glue Compamy near Brant! ford, causing a. loss of $125,000 and throwing ï¬fty men Curt of work. mo viii BRUTAL MURDER Al QUEBEC and it was give“ 3‘ 56°01“ reading Young Girl Beaten to Death on Sunday Morning ‘With Friends Near-by door leading to the store open. S'he entered the shop, but could not see her daughter anywhere, and again called her without receiving any answer. Then she opened a. door leading to a. repair shop in the rear of the main store, and to her horror of blood. Crazed with grief and horror at This morning about half-«past 10 the awful spectacle which her 'm-ur-' o’clock somebody rang the bell at die-red child presented, she ran to the Private enctlrance. dess pubols the street wringiinzg her blends S“.133.an hundred e . "e as, re u},- answered the 001' an , coming up- crying hysterical y for hep. me the ,Selismï¬, 3nd. Elvira stains, she told her mother that passerswby, attracted, by her cries, Wished to came to her aid, and on; learning of change a pair of boots which did the crime immediately summoned not ï¬t. She took the key to ope-n Dr. Arthur Leclerc, whose oï¬ice is a door communicating from the pans: opposite. Dr. Leclerc found the girl amt twoJC-hirds of this number. are sage of thep'rivate entrance to the still breathing, but in. a state of un- } I store and evidently let the man 111. d in half an blolod", and the let":1 side of «her head ’ - .' ' , ‘ hour her mother became anxious be ind tlhecar ha. . een crushed- in 6 o Cloak Frlday 123 333,113. and called down to her. There was with a shoe-maker’s hammer, which 3,000 feet; high, passing through no reply, and the mothefr, 0:11 dasâ€" K35 found clotth rwnth bnlooduand oun lo 1r. - consciousness. , She was bathed in “‘94 "V'VV'VV’vvv'vv-v v :rY‘.!:'7-‘!‘«Y‘WE'VE? v - " :..,‘,..', My xv .3 I} V) I a I) ,1 a .3: ,3 .p > ~3- .:> 2 r is B '5 Eb ; i: ,b ’ > ; > ,3 _ p ‘3‘ ~> .) ' r 5 ’ <vvu‘kvv‘1 rah/033. . 4 "-1 iv v- usvv'v .. £4 -2. {e ‘4 .. 3y}. ‘. Ya (I