cried the old uncle from 'hat’s this?†coming-out gown.†tYoudoIook’sityou ’OIEKS-OSHAWA. Out TEA :ign substancgs. lb. At an arms. .‘ i S; :‘3 man . E? l- D-..M.....=,§.£.a.3} l‘azldamy, 84:. Sty-gm, 3-â€. :1: Josh,†asked the fair she came down arrayed in r. “when do you think a! Estate etc. We know at to buy at the present. prick {or particulars. >\ ’59. COI'AIJ‘, 0N1. ‘53“ ‘ .u4l1 I: I! ran: MNWMDM "can“; 0.. H a . a!" E“ ‘unvg 2g†5.33?" maï¬a-nu. F: *wneréi Use ‘ A Sch. 5:16;, 8;! may BIJS'IBB ever used. Take: :33 for mm: or severe lean. mmam iON LRSON :OPLE. '3'; $13 1331mm (imam 190 I I. "aide St. Toronto, 0m. feature of an; t mail 0 nil-rm uniq_a:ak. no Ionic-d u. I m m3: OS! PACKET HAS ACTUALLY KILLED EL 0F FLIES MOST OUT. for Pot: ester» m7 ' M 810.30 pi no." ' momma, FER PACKET FRO! Balsam u She é -lmitad. Grade Mines 353 WWW RE“?! animus. m: shine. on. D} you: out}! dcet._elk and Wilson's Strut. Tunic. Guada- F LY PADS 9937mm eomtwr’s Iron. m. Imamâ€. [or Cement. and i amine Canadian 3 Year. Sample W'iLSON, A33 * sscuamss P â€IPA“? ï¬nes Mineral 3 Bond 5 Se- All next day I hunted in a bitter wind and in a bitter temper. There were clouds arising. my huntsmen told me. that looked very like snow clouds. and I must beware being snowed up upon the height. I was in the humor to welcome hardship and even danger. and so the whole day we rode after an old rogue boar and came back in darkness. at no small risk. empty handed. and the 'roughness of my temper by no means improved. Next day the weather still held up. and again I hunted. My men must have wondered what had come over their erstwhile genial master; Even I ordered my horses. I wouxa mum to no remonstrance. no waming. I must. return to Tollenda]. I sajd, were all the powers of darkness leagued against me. And return I did. It. was a piece of toolbar-dines: m which I ran, unheeding. the risk of my life: but the Providence that protects madmen (fro- tected me that night. and Janos an I arrived in safety through a gate of wind and a fall of snow that might indeed have proved our death. All covered with rime I ran into the house and [up tothedmrolhnrxo‘om. ltwas past "III II I'lllnu ~- ion of her faded smile. of her dimple poled to a pitinble ghost. of her baby-ï¬sh drowning tin. and then of her while {nee struck with such scorn, haunted me to madness. I sickened from my food as I sat to my supper and put down my cup untasted. And now as the wind whistled and the foreboded storm was gathering upon us, the longing to see her. to be with her. to kneel at her feet â€"-yes, I would now be the one to kneel â€"-came upon me with such violence that I could not withstand it. ‘ ' â€"--.-IA 1:3Gan "nu .- ul I‘- done? I had sought to humble her â€" I had but debased myself! Through the whole day her words. “Is this your Eng- lish honor?†had rung a dismal rhythm in my ear to the beat of my horse's hoofs on the hard ground. to the call of the horn amid the winding rocks. The vis- ,n L__ 4:...nl‘ That night. again. I sat and branded by the leaping flame of the pine logs, but it was in a different mood. All my surly determination. my righteous in- dignation. hnd melted from me. leaving _._ -- m-..» o: “mm- m a sudden in “'3'"! I lull. Illlll n-uy-‘w‘. me as weak as water. of a sudden in the closest heat of the chase them had come to me an awful vision of what I had done: a terrible swift realization of the insult I had flung at the fare of [he womanwm) was indeed the wife of my heart and love. Oh. God. what had I LH#L|- LA- 1 my uncle could not have shown them a harder rule or ridden them with less consideration through the hardest at ways in the teeth of the most ï¬endish of winds. That night. again. I sat and branded M the» tanning flame of the pinejogs. Alone in the solitary hut. by that hearth where but the night previous my heart had overflowed with such tender- ness for hen] sat and nursed my griev- ances and brooded upon my wrongs till they grew to overpowering size and multiplied a thousandfotd; and curious it is that what I thought of most was the bitter unfairness to me, the mon« strong injustice of her contempt. at the very moment when i had meant to sac- rifice my life and prospects- to her. I told myself she did not love me. and never loved me. and worked myself to a pitch of frenzy over that thought. The memory of her announcement. on this afternoon. the full knowledge of her deceit. the confession of her worse than hurgher origin. weighed not now one feather-weight. inmy resentment. That I had cost from me as the least of my troubles: so can a man Change and so can love swallow up all other passions! No doubt. I told myself. she was mock- ing me now in her own mind; no doubt she reckoned that her poor infatuated fool would come creeping back with all promptitude and beg for her smile. She would team at least that she had mar- ried a man: not till I saw her down at my feet would I take her back to my breast. All in my white heat. of anger I sum- moned Janos and bade him tell his mistrexx’s nurse that I had gone into the mountains for a week. And then I or. den-ed a fresh horse. and followed only by the old man. dashed off like one p05< sessed into the rocky wastes. The 590m of her tongue cut me like a whip. I swore a mighty oath that I would never forgive her uu she sued for pardon. She must be taught who was master. In solitude she should re‘ fleet. and learn to me her sins to meâ€" her audacilyâ€"her unwarrantable pre- sumptionâ€"her ingratitude! A burning tide of blood rushed to her brow: 1 saw it unseeing. as a man does in paxaion: but 1 have lived that scene over and over again. waking and dream- ing. since. and every detail of it is stamped upon my brain. Next she grew livid while, and spread out her hands, a though a precipice had suddenly op- ened before her; and then she cried: “And this is your English honor!" and turning on ner heel she left me. Wilh a bitter laugh. “I married the Princess,†1 said, “but I took the ser- vant home.†l was still too angry to stay my tongue. She put her hands. to her head like one who has turned suddenly giddy. “You married me before God's altar." she said, in a sort of whisper; “you married me. and you took me home." “I mean." said lâ€"“l mean. madam, that you are what I choose to make you. That marriage you so skilfully on- Cumpassed is, if I choose it. no mur- nage." . CHAPTER lX.â€"-(Conlinued.) “I think," I thundered. “thal. consider- ing your posiliou, a little humility would be more becoming lhun this attitude! You should remember that you are here on tolerance only; that it is to my gener- osily nlone that you owe the right. to cull yomself an honest woman." “What do you mean?" said she. ï¬ercely as I had spoken myself. ++++ H $HH+H+++++4+++++++H+++W T116 Wilful Ottili-C; VOL. 18. N0. 9. $1 per MILLBROOK Princess. Or. The Privilege of a fown things had been gathered together the day of her departure. which was the 'day I left her, and they had been fetch- ted the next morning by some strange Iservant in an unknown travelling coach. More than this I have not been able to glean. for the storm has rendered the ways impassable: but it. is rumom‘d that 'tho Countess do Schrookendorf is dead, and that the Princess also has left the country. I hardly know why I have resume-1 tho tln‘vndrol' this miserable story. God knows tnnt I have no good thing to narrate, and that this setting forth, 1qu storing. as it were. or my bitter harm-w o! disappointments. can bring no solace with it. And yet man must hope as long as life lasts; and the hope keep; springing up again, in deï¬ance of all reason,. that, somehow, some day, we shall meet again, Therefore I write, in order that. should such day come. she may read for herself and learn how the thought of her filled each moment of my life since our parting; that she may read how I have sought her, how I have mourned for her; that she may know that my love has never failed her. This it is that hear-tens me to my task. Moreover. all else is so savorless that I know not how otherwise to ï¬ll the time. I have been here ï¬ve weeks: there are many houses where I am weIcome. many friends ' who would gladlx lend It was with no lightening of my thoughts that I saw the whité cliffs of old England break the sullen grey of the horizon, with no patriotic joy that. I set foot on my native soil again, but ra. ther with a heavy, heavy heart, What can this land he to me now but. a lanl of exile? All llmt makes home to a man I have left behind me. _ .-. .J .V V l The room was all empty and all dark; ‘I called for lights. There was no truce or her presence; her bed had not been 'Slcpt in. Like a maniac l lore (than! fthc house. seeking her. shrieking her 'name. demanding explanations from ;those to whom my speech meant rm- =thing. l racked little obmy dignity. lil. lie of the impression I must create upon ,my household! And at last Janos, his 'wrinklcd face withered up and contortcl 'with the trouble he dared not speak gave me the tidings that the gracious lady had gone. She and her nurse had set ,forth on foot and lelt no message with i any one. Home in England once again. it home it can be called. this set of hired chum- bers. so dreary within. with outside the lowering fog and the unfamiliar sounds that were once so familiar. It is all strange, after eight. years‘ exile: and tne grime, the noise. the narrow limits, the bustle of this great city. weary me aft-3p the noble silence, the wide life. at Tot lendhal. ' “Ottilie!†he cried wildly. and suddenly brought back to grey reality stopped and clasped his hand. Ttmre was in the old servant’s hard and all but immut- able face so wistful a yearning of kin- drnd sorrow that. suddenly catching sight of it in the midst at his despair, the young man broke down and tell forward like a child upon that faithful breast. 1 Two or three of the women came pot- tering down the passage to me and With ~9~VDPessive gestures addressed inc vol- .Ubly: one of the girls was weepinu. . I could not understand a word they said. ,but with a new terror 1 burst open the tdoor of the bedroom. In this appalling 'di'ead I realized for the first time how :1 toved my wife!_ . u AHA“ .............. u. U! hunt. “Courage. honored master" said Ja- nos, “\\e “in ï¬nd her again." “Anothe day." groaned he. “anoihvr hateful day!" He flung his arms befnrc him and his head down upon them. So sleep came upon him; and so old Janos. creeping in a little later, red-eyed from his watchful night. found him. The sleeper woke as a man. with hands rough and gnarled. yet tender as a we. man's. strove lo lil‘i him in an easier ni- fitude; woke and-looked at him with a fixed semiâ€"conscious Mare. lmidnighl. and there I paused for a mu- }mgpl tearing to Adislurb her. _.‘| Basil Jonnico flung his pen {mm him; the logs in the hearth had burnt them selves to white ash; his candles were glittering in their sockets. and behind the close-drawn cuxtains the faint dawn \vaS'sprending over a world of snow. The wind still howled. the storm was still unabated. I have no more to say. It is only two nights ago since I came home to Stlt‘h misery. and how I have passed 'h. hours. what needs it to set forth? At times I tell myself that it is better so. that she is false and base. and that I were the poorest of wretchcs to [ni'gh‘c her. But at times again I see the wlmle naked truth before me. and know that she was; to.me what no woman can be again. And my uncle looks down at {no as I write. with a sour. frowning face. and seemsâ€"strange it is. yet trueâ€" in revilc me now with bitter scorn. not for having kept her. the rotm'ioro. but for having driven her from my castle! Old man, old man. it is your teaching that has undone me; do you reproach mg nqw_lhat it has wrought my ruin? “Thou ï¬nds! her: thou cmildst not hold her." he seems to snarl. “11:11 need is there for me to “rile' down what 1 endured thal black ntgtillg When i look back upon it it is as onei may look back upon some lenihlui nightmare. some hideous mommy all delirium. She had left me. and left me‘ thus. without a v1 ord. and mm but one sign. The cursed pedigree “us still spiced upon the table where “a had quarreled. I found upon it her nodding ring. A great. cross had been drawn: over the hall'- written entry of our map; riage. That “as all. but it was surely; enough. The jewels I had given her' were carefully packed in the cases and laid upon a table in nor room. tier; annum. CHAPTER I. PART II. ’arions Estimates on the Size of His Fortune. A London dcspaich savs â€those who are really in a position to gixe authori- tative information regarding the amount of the fortune of the late Alfred Belt, the South African financier, and the terms of his will, time not yet given it to the newspapers. Estimates from $125,.000- 000 to $625,000,000 have been published, but it will~ probably be found when the terms of the will are given out that Mr. Beit's fortune was somewhat below $50,- 000,000. About onethird of this amount, it is expected, will be bequeathed to national purposes in Great Britain and South Africa, mainly of an educational character. Mr. Belt had several marri- ed sisters in Germany and Austria, and presumably they. as well as his mother and brother, will inherit considerable amounts. Revolting Case of Cruelty Revealed at a Coroner's Inquest. A Montreal despatch says: The Cor- oner's jury which investigated the death of the two-and-a-half-year-old child of John Dobuck, a Polish family residing at Point St. Charles, has rendered a verdict of murder, and the stop-mother is accused of the crime. The medical testimony was to the effect that the child had ben kicked to death. seven or its ribs having been fractured. The step- mother, who disappeared beiorc the crime was discovered, is still at liberty, although the police have been looking for her (or c couple of days. A London despalch says: Under Colonial Secretury Churchill imparted to the [louse of (Jmmnons on \\'ednesday afternoon the ollicial reply to the Govern- ment’s inquiries in the alleged atrocities perpetrated on the wounded ulus in Na- tal during the operations against. the rebel chief anbaata. According to a. telegram from the Governor of Natal. 3,000 natives were killed throughout tne operations and 2,000 were made prison- ers. including the. wounded. The Natal Government had no infornmtion about wounded nulives being killed by the na- tive levies. The telegram confirmed the ofï¬cial version of Balubaala's head being cut off for identiï¬ealion, owing to the decomposition of the rest of the body and of its being subsequently buried with the latter. Three Thousand Killml: 'l‘wo Thousand Prisoners. Not until the sixth owning. however. despito our oxlx'am-dinm-y hurt] Iran)!- ling. did we. mmxnlnd upon a pair of sorry and warn-out nugs. ï¬nd ourselves crossing the bridge under the lowered gates of Budissin. That was then the sixth day from the date of my wife's flight. 't’ho'l’riucess had rcnminrd quietly :tt Scin‘erlmulort‘ during the works \vhirh had followed upon my mnrring“. but on the day previous to our return to Tol- londhal from the shooting-lodge, a couple of courirrs had arrived at the (Iotmlrsx‘s gates close upon the other. bringing. it Would seem. important lot- tors {or the Princess. who had been greatly ngitatml upon romipt of thrm. Rho had hastily (lrspntrhrd n mounted messenger to my wife. whether with a privuto oomnumirutioh from herself or merely to forward miSsivcs to‘ her from her own home I know not: but, at any rate the papers which Ottilir lmd httl‘ (ton from me that total day were brought here by this mun. After she left 'l‘ollrnd- hot n tow hours later. my wife had ar- rivel at Schrorkrmtort‘ in a poamnt’s cart. That same rvening two tt'tl\'t‘ttll'l,‘.! conrhrs. bringing lmlins. onirrrs. :mtt servants. hzul mmlt‘ their nppournnrc It the custlr: it was one of those com-hos whirl: wont to tho strunglmuso next morning and bore own}: Otttlio's belong- ings. in the afternoon the whole party. including my witr. lmd sot t‘orth m great haste for thr north. dospito uni~ vrrsnl warning: of tho gathering storm. Thor:1 rould he no doubt but that their (lostinntion was Lnusltz. moxt probably the nt‘itttt‘nCO itself. Rutlissin. When I had ascertained all [his I promptly decided upon my murse. Tak- ing,r with me. Janos only. I inshmlly shirt- on {or the1 next past-lawn. whore we were able to secure fresh horses. and whence wn pushr‘d on Hm same nignl some twenty miles- Im-llmr. . My ï¬rst stugn was of course In the castlé of the 01d Counloss Svlu'ookonmwf. where"! found lho place well-night do- scrlcd. its mistress having boon. own as I had been iufm-mm‘l. a [cu-might dead and buried. But lhoro was :1 ser- vunl in charge of tho muply. (Insulate house. and from hm‘ I glmnnod tidings bqlh prooisn and sufï¬cient. me their company, many places where Young men can find dishaclion of diverc kinds and degrees: but I lune not suc- ceded in bringing 1m wlf in lake up â€IL: new life wiln um' zest: I had rallim dwell upon the past in spite of all its bitterness [ham face (he desolauion of the present. In [MK \my 1'! mum in pass Hm! il was full _tcn days from Hm timo- Hml she had left 'I‘nllcndhal that l was at length able to shu't forth in mn'suit. But I reckoned without the dimcuttivs which â€:0 ï¬rst grout snnwt'atl ot the year. before the hzmt frost. comcS‘JO make it pussnhto fm- stcttqing. was cro- sting for us in those hoights whm-v the drifts II†to such depth. Day and night my tottmvs worknd to but u way for me down to the imperial rumt: um] I \mrtu‘d with ttmm, watctmd. momn-ngmt thmn. and all. it seemed. to so tittlv purpose that I thought I should have gone mad outright. Tho oruot heavens now smitm't. nuw t‘l'nwhmt. upon ntn' work. so that. hotween Iraq! and thaw amt thaw and trust. the task was (tnuhtnd. and my I'I‘isml ham seemed to grow stronger In‘ stt‘znt of [053. It was on [he lhird day of the great. storm that the pen fell from ,_my hand at 'I‘ollendhal, and for four and twenly hours more that self-same storm ranged in violence. One word of my old sew vanl‘s had brought me on a sudden to a deï¬nite purpose. I was full of eager hope of tracing: her. or ï¬nding her. once it were possible to start upon the quest. For the gala which kept mo prisoner must have x-l-lm-dod hor likewise: and even with two dnys‘ slut-l. I told mysoll she could no? have gone fur upon her road. , CHILD KICKED TO DEATH. MR. BEIT'S MILLIONS. NATAL OPERATIONS. (To be Continued.) Durham and MILLBROOK ONT.. THURSDAY, JULY 20'. 1906. Tm‘onlo. July 24.â€"There was a mod- cralely [air run 10-day. and lrndo was comparatively brisk at steady prices. Smokers and feedersâ€"1110 common mugh Eastern slackers are simply a drag on the market. as they do not seem to he wanted at all. Lambs are ï¬rmer. and sheep about steady at recent quotations. [logsâ€"'l‘ho scarcity of hogs is still holding the nmrkel. very ï¬rm. Hem-y Feedersâ€"Good and heavy feed- ers at. $4.25 to $4.50. Butchers â€" Choice picked butcher cattle, $4.50 to $4.70: medium heavy butchers at. $4 to $4.35; mixed his and cows at $1.75 to $3.50; fat cows, $3.50 to $3.60. Buffalo. July BILâ€"Flourâ€"Dull. Wheat â€"-Sprin,«z dull; N0. 1 Nm‘lhel-n. 83%0. Compâ€"Stronger: N0. 2 yellow. SRC; N0. 2 com. 561/20. Oatsâ€"Dull: No. 2 white, 420: N0. 2 mixed. 39%(5. Canal freigllls â€"â€"Sl(‘ady. O Exporlâ€"EUm choice, 3-.“4 :5 to 8510; medium expmt $4 .60 to S “aged ShOll-kCC‘p Ioedvrs, $4.50 to Light Slackersâ€"$2.25 to $3.25. Sheep and Lambsâ€"Steady at $4 to $4.25. Spring Lambsâ€"6 lo 7%0 per lb. Calvesâ€"Prices range from $3.50 to Department ~ot\;\griculture to EXIendlhe Prcéent System. A despalch fromptlawa Says: The Department of Agriculture proDOSeS to extend its cold storage car service from dairy proilucls to fruit. JSeVle years .._-._A _ _ ago the Government undertook ' five dollars toward the cost of joints £213, car and to carry buller or checscf; 15m; produced a demand for cold slobafle cars. Last summer an average of “.1 hundred a day were used from July 14¢ to Sept. 15. It is expected the fruitnlén will ï¬nd the cool cars an advantage in marketing their goods. Provisionsâ€"Barrels short cut mess, 32’: half barrels do" $12.50. Clear fut back. $23.54); lam,r on! heavy mess. $2!» 50; half lnn'rels (10.. SIL25: dry sull. long clear bacon. [2%c to 12%;; barrels plate hoof at $13.50; half bum-ls (10.. $7.95: ~~ barrels heavy mess beef, $11.50; half Lu.‘ I, ' m,‘ a- New Yurk. Jul y 24. â€" Spot ï¬rm: No. 2 rod. 83%v 010v: utor: No. :2 red. 840 f. c. h 3110:â€: No. 1 Nm‘Hm-n Duluth. 88%0 no.1). ufloat: No. 2 hard winter, 83%c r.o.b. afloat. $5.50 each. Hogsâ€"Selects, $7.70; lights and fats. $7.45. Mitch Cowsâ€"Choice, $30 to $40 each; common, $17 to $20. lluyâ€"~.\’U. 1. c2150: N072. $8 to $3.5â€: ciowr. mixed. $7 In $7.50. a'nd pure clover“ $6 to $6.50 per km in our lots. Provisionsâ€"Barrels 32’: half lmt'x'uls do back. $23.50; long ('11 50; half barrels (10.. S v.‘ an...“ barrels honw 111es< l1eef"$11.50;1’1nlf huu‘ols 110.. $6.25: 10111110111111 la1'.d 7V1: I) ED}’c; pm‘o 1111‘1I.l2c lo 12yc: kelllc 1'r-111lc1c11. 1’, .1 103411 hams 1’/c In 161‘. 1113011111111fl In 8121‘: b1011kfnst bacon. 1631.. to 171‘: \\1'111]so1' bacon 16‘/c; fresh killed abattoir messed hogs $11; alive, 33 per mt. Eggs â€" Priors- n'm. being 17r- and perhaps more for slraight ,qulhm'od‘ stock when ï¬nn. and about the same for No. l candlod. Selects are selling around 200. Poor quulily ()[slmighl gnlhm‘otl are not \mnlod. and some are offcrlng at 16c and even less. leled Oats â€"â€" Pricm unchanged at $3?) p‘x bag: counnml is sh)“ of 5:110 at $1. ’0 to 81.45 pm- lug. Flourâ€"Manilnbu spring “11031, $1.60 to. $4.70: six-(mg bukors‘. $4.10 10 $4.20; winlor wheat pntcnls. $4.30 to $2.40; straight mllcrs. $3.00 to $1.10; do m bugs. $1.83 to $1.90; extras, $1.40 10 81.50. Millfml â€" Manitoba bran. in bags. $16 10 SW: shorts. $20 [a 9521 per Inn; Ontario Inn-1n in hugs. $15.50 m 316: shorls. $20.50 to Sfll: millml maulllo. $21 I.) 325 per lon. and slmighl grain. S28 lo $20. Montreal. July ‘2’». â€" (iruin -â€" Prices for oats show nochang‘e. (331' lots of No. 2 white were quulvd at 4-36. No 3 a! flzv. and No. 4 :11 Alxc per bushel, ox-atore. , do solids .. Dairy prinls ‘ do pulls ‘ do lubs ':ukers‘ ‘ Cheese ~â€" At 12:40 lo lots hero. l’ululons â€" Prices are $1 far Ontario and $1 to but. ‘mIed Straw â€" Al. $5.50 (0 $6 per [on for car lots on tx-m-k hero. Balm! Hay â€"â€" Quotations umh: urged :11 Si!) per Inn fur No.1 timulhv in car lots on h‘nck here. Miwd. “'34). Rutter â€"â€" Inferior grades of bullor con- tinue to count forward frccly, while prices are about steady. with u lirm 10:10 [or [he better grades. Crumnory prints 20cl021c Bran â€" Ontario â€" Very dull at $15 to $16.50 in bulk; outside; short, scarce at $17.50 to $18. Wheat. â€"â€" On’tarin â€" 780 to 790 ltor N0. :2 red and white. outside; sprung, 740. to 75c; goose, 730 to 740. Wheat â€"- Manitoba â€"â€" lea'tions [or (lcltvury at lukc'pm'ts are llrinur nt 8.3g: {01' No. 1_ northern; No. 2 northern, 83%0. - , , Outsâ€"~33c to 38%: outside for No. 2. Ryanâ€"6'30 [0 MC uutsidm‘. ' Barleyâ€"490 to 5lc outside for No. .. Pongâ€"SOC to SEC outside. tturnâ€"AInorhrun N0. :2 yellow. 59%0 tn (300, Ontario points. 6 BREADSTUFF S. Toronto, July 24.â€"The first of Ontario flour from the new crop for August de- lu‘ory, was at $3 for export. \V'ucut pricus are fl‘rmer, following Chicago. Flour â€" Ontario â€" 9“ per cent. pub (ants, old crop are quutcd at $3.05 In $3.10, buyers" bugs, for export. Mani- luhu ’â€" Unchanged; $4.40 to M430 [or ï¬rst patents, $4 to 34.“) let seconds, and $3.90 to $4 for bukurs’. LEADING MARKETS NFAV COLD STORAGE F0“ FRUIT. LIVE STOCK MARKETS. MONTREAL MAHKI'Z'I‘S‘. Y0 RK WHEAT MARKET“ BUFFALO MA RICE COUNTRY PRODUCE. unclnm‘xgcd nt- $LIO for Qlw- 20cl021c .. Inch) 200 . 16C to 13%6 .. 17cl01h‘c .. 17cm 130 .. [6010176 12%0 for job MEMEE Government Will I'In'cl Addilional Buildings. A 'l‘oronlo despalch says: In connec- lion with llie grunling of the vonlrmrl for lhe extension of lhc Chemical Build- ing at Guelph Agriculllunll College [0 Mr. S. F. Wliillmm. of Brunll‘urd, it is announced that. tho (‘uovm-nnmnl will build three or {our more additional buildings to Hit? College. ’l‘ln‘se m'o creclod in order in lm-ililnlo the work of lhis growing inslilnlion. The addi- tion nmnlionod above will cost $10,700. Toronto Man Said In "aw- Sm'ured a ‘Big Conlmci. A dospaich from Mmilroul says: M, I. Haney. of 'l‘oronlo. it is l'cpm'lud. has socuwd a conlmcl to build a tunnel un- der the St. Clair Rixer for the \lichigzm Central Railway. The tunnel with ap- proaches is to be about lwo miles long and to be built of piles laid in conc1 etc Over One Million Gallons Destroyed in Dundee Fire. A Dundee, Scotland. dospatrh says: One of the most destructive tire: that ever occurred in Scotland started in this city on 'l‘hursday night in the bonded warehouse of James Watson and (20. it. is estimated that damage to the amount of $1.5(K).()t)() has been done. The tire is still raging and other pro- perties are burning, including the premises of l‘tuberlsun and (30., dis- tiller-s. l-‘ive acres of buildings are on ï¬re. and over 1,000.0th gallons of whiskey have been destroyed. Government Receives Cheque From Mrs. Cox's lixcculors. A Toronto despMch says: The Pro- vincial Treasury Depnrlmmt rocnivml on Friday a cheque for 320.500 from the executors of the oslalc of the 1310 Mrs. Margaret (10x. wife of Senator Cu ~:. the amount representing succes- sion duties on the property 10“ by Ml“. Deputy Minister oi Lands and Forests Receives a Report. A 'l‘orontn despair-h says: In the 'l‘huudvr My districts rrporls are cur- rent thnl moose are becoming more plentiful than ever. and thul tho, onforcu- ment, of the rogulur game laws are having a good effect. An evidence of the large number roaming about is the receiving of a loner by Mr. Aubrey White from Fire nnup‘vr Murray. who states That during one of tho luttoris trips through the territory south and east of the Mutlnmm and south of the base line of Strange and Marquis 'l‘mvu- ships. ml moose and 17 umusc calves were sighted. Dr. lludgelts Receives DiSquio-ling l!»- pm‘t From l‘myassan. A (,lvspatvh Irma 'l‘umnla says: A I‘t-pm‘l- lo the effect that a vase of what, is termed “Mm-k" smallpox 0|"(‘lll'l'0(] lacl, week at Powassan has horn l't"("l‘l\'k‘d hy Dr. Chas Ii. llmlgatls. svl'rutary (If the Provincial Board at llnalth. ll l'osultl-d fatally within throw (lays, alllmugh awry known ru‘nwdy was 11ml la saw the \‘il-tim's lilo. 'l'lw vase was innm-diatoly isolated by Dr. Pnrlv- amt oym'ymm 0xâ€" pasod prmnptly qua'antinml. The pa- tient was. a trawler. and it is llmugnt mntractml tho (lisnasn l'mm smnoonn who hall only a mild attack. “It is ul- tm the case." said Dr. llmlgvlts. “that what may he a slight allavk on one C(‘mstitutinn proves fatal to another." C. l’. R. Arranges [or Sixly l-‘rum Shops in Montreal. A despuich from Montreal says: The I‘L‘nlurkubh- lisl (If unit-1's by (Ianadian raihruys for rolling stuck during:r [he present year was added In on Friday by the Canadian ‘arifh: Railway. \vhit'h handed out insh'm-liuns in Hui Angus shops In turn out al UHCL‘ (in cars. ag- gregating in 'aluc $41MJJMML Tia-y an- dividcd as Iolluws: Fiw dining cars. twenly “I‘M-(11118.4, h-n baggage and i'.\- press. and lwenly-iiw haggagu ("111’s fur immigrant use in pai'lirulai'. \\'r.i'k \\':L~‘ Cmnmonced 10-day by ihu Angus Show (in a (I. l‘. H. Ui'dt‘l' fur hm thousand freighl cars. â€it! urdm' fur which \\‘.‘I,\ givml a few wooks agu. 'l‘hvy an: win-Iii about $81“) each. making a lulal u! SI.- (WLHOO, or a grand total in lha- his! {“0 unions of Simmflli. “I have seen crops in Manitoba and Saskatcheuan to this point. Grain of all sorts, well headed and genoralh very promising. Very tine tiulds of wheat seen throughout Manitoba. At the lixpcrinmntnl Farm, Brundz‘m. the rrops are all heavy, found some rust there. I found some rust, on leaves, but. none, on stalks; no rust on outs or barley. Noirluull tho groin crops soon in <eiskutchouun are good. many of them, 0\(-ull011l.\\'ho.il u:1i:4 hur- in and 110114 on tho Exprrinu'nlul l'mm are 101) heavy . I think tin) are as good us how ever been soon hc‘ro. No rust hus been found on any of the cur- ruls. A large cwursion hero on Friday of farmers from ‘nll points between here and Princo Albert 'und \VPSt to Moose-V juw, all agree that crops of all .surts lhis your promise. to be the beat they have ever had.†Incoumging Telegram From West to Agriculture Department. An Ollzuwa despatch suys: Dr. Wm. Saunders. who is now on u tour of the West, tclcgruphs the Department of Agricullure us follows from Indian Head Sask. :â€" TUNNEL l'NDER Tllli ST. CLAIR. Gl'l‘lLl’ll COLLEGE GRO\\'ING. ANOTHER BIG (EAR ORDER. BLACK SMALLI’OX VASE. FOR SUCCESSION DUTY. MOOSE Allli PlJCN'I‘ll-‘I'L. BEST CROPS YET. "0T SCOTCH. A despatch from Moscow says: A landlord. fleeing from Bobrov, in the Province oi Voroneseh. where a peasant uprising has taken place, has arrived â€here, and gives a frightful picture of the devastation. He describes the losses in the province as colossal. The troops are powerless to cope with the peasants who are marching in large bands, do- stroying practically everything. Not more than one-tenth of the estate are spared. The movement was started by the refusal of the landlords in the north- ern part of the Bobrov district to agree 1to an advance of wages to the farm lwomen. A despaleh from Hamburg, Germany. says: 'l‘owurd tne end of last week Grand Duke \‘ladimir received an urgent. un- signed letter telling him to beware of travelling along the Treves route on Sunday. This communication was placed in the hands of detectives and the Grand Duke decided to postpone his journey. it. was also handed to the railroad ofï¬cials. who secured the line with the result that. a dynamite cartridge with a fuse attached to the line was found on the Coblenz-'l‘reves section of the road. The indignation felt, here is unbounded. as Grand Duke Vladimir 's immensely popular. owing to his geni- al manner and cheerful ways with all he meets. A despntch from St. Potersburg says: The assassin of General Kozloff of the headquarters staff. who was murdered in the linglish Park at Potorhof on Sat- urday lust. has been identiï¬ed as one Lett. belonging to an organization the members. of which have strn to kill General 'l‘ropotf. General Pn‘nce Putiatin and 13 other persons intimately connect- ad with the court. The assassin was chosen by lot. A dcspatch from St. l’c-tersburg says: It is reported that some of the soldiers of tho Seminm'sky guard regiment have served notice on their commander. Col- onel Minn. that they intend to kill him at the ï¬rst opportunity for forcing them to murder their follow-citizens during the Moscow revolt, and that Minn. in four of his~ life, fled {mm the camp at Kmnsnoyo.<lo. Despatches from the interior continue to tell without interruption stories of the burning of manor houses, robberies, murders. collisions between peasants and rural guards. and the hurried dc- spnlch of troops here, and there. The centre of the peasants" uprising is Vor- onezh Province, where the peasants in their mania for the destruction of pro- perty do not discriminate between friends and enemies. as evideneed by the com- plete devastatitm of the estate of M. lx’okoshkine. one of the most â€prominent. Constitutional Democrats in the lower House. \\'ednesday's reports describe the situation in that province as “hope- less." from the standpoint of the land- lords. The situation is almost as bad in Poltova and Smotensk Provinces. tn 'l‘umbov Province eigthv peasants are reported to have been killed or wound- ed by dragoons. I'.~' I'l proIIIiIIOIIt IIIrIIIbor. seem to be con- \inml that the} must hold the peasanls a! all hazards. The mcnIb0rs of the 0\'- homo Mt somnod to (our! :1 ï¬ght. preachhu.r open I-0\'o 'uh‘on [min the geos- IIIIIII. 'lho \ovoe \Ionna “hicli oxen Icllocls the views of the count sa\'§ mat Hm adoption by the lmwr House 'of'an :zddIuss to lhc counhy would go beyond th0 jurisdidion of Parliament. andAir- thlh' (onshluto an appeal [mm the Gov cunnent lo the pooplo. 'l‘ho paper add.4: “\\Ilh I'ls adoption PaIIIaIIIeIIt would moss tho RulIICIIII. abandon ils professod policy of hung to restrain the counlrv and instead of pucihing it deliberatelv pour oil on the flames" A (195454011 from StnPotcrsburg says: The peflshnt. war, which began in the Provinu-e of Voronezh, is spreading over the cmlral prcwinccs. Fifteen estates near the (lily of V'ormmzh have been burned by the peasant mobs since Sun- day. A strike ol‘hired laborers n week ago was brulully suppressed by the Govern- ment. forces. Enormous masses of peas- nnh-y then congregated and marched ‘n a great enlumn several miles in lenglh to sack all the eslales in the neighbor- hood. Troops arrived and tried lo dis- perse the mob will) valleys of muskelry. Many hundreds of the peasants were and other courlivrs. and the gonoral epi- demic of assassination, which has ter- rorizrd not only the local authorities. but. oven the police. togrthrr with the wild dvstrurtion of property by the peas- antry in half a dozen provinces during the last. few days. have again strength- ened the small part of the court which heticvos in restoring to “extreme mea- sures." Tho adoption by the lower House of t’artiznm-nt of an address '0 the country will, it is toured. place in tho hands of tho roartionists the needed low-r to mow his Majesty. M. l’ctrajit- ski vainly warned the lower House on ’t‘m-szlay oi the svriousnoss of the pro- posed slop. hut the majority of the Con- stitutional Doniorrats. of which party he ed renewal of apprehension that the crisis may end in a coup d'etut against l>’zn~Ji.-nnenl. The assassinations of Vice Admiral (lhouknin and General K0110â€, the discovery that behind the murder of the General was a big plot to kill not only General 'l'ropuff, but, Prince Pulialin A dcsputch from St. Petersburg saysz The political barometer is again lalling. 'l'hc conlusigu which seems to have taken possession of the upper spheres since thc’cHorts to form a coalition Min- istry failed, coupled with the alarming l‘L‘llorls from tho interior and the atti- tude of Parliament, make almost any- thing possible. There has been 8 mar]:- AUIHGRITIES IN TERROR Uninterrupted Series of Murders and Conflicts in Russia. 1w) NEWS FROM INTERIOR. [SPIDEMIC OF ASSASSINATION. PEASANT DEPREDATIONS. THREATEXED COL. MINN. GRAND DUKE VLADIMIR. ESTATES SACKED DAILY. KOZIDFF‘S ASSASSIN. . RICHARDS, Publisher and ProprietOr The Weather Continues Right [or the Wheat. A Winnipeg dcspatch says: The week- ly crop repom of the C. l’. R. was is- sued on Wednesday. and is more com- prehensive even than usual, as the mummy require accurate information on which to base preparations for hand- ling the crop promptly. According to this report. the growth is good. the weather ï¬ne and warm. the wheat is all headed out and the prospect for a much better than average yield continues un- impaired. Barley cutting began on Portage Plains on Thursday. The crop in cast- ern Manitoba is slightly further ad- vanced than in the far west. No indi- cations of rust are reported. but at Duck Lake blight has been noticed in a few A dcspatch from St. l’ctersburg says: Refugees from the Town. of Syzmu. which was burned on Thursday. de- scribe the town as a sea of tire when they last saw it. The population of 33; 000 fled to the ï¬elds. it was useless to think of attempting to extinguish the flames. it is known that many lives have been lost. Anonymous letters. in which the tire was threatened. declare that a holocaust would he better than the misery of the present despotism. The bulk of the population is in the sur- rounding fields. without food or shelter, many being: violently insane. The loss or life in the catastrophe. which exceed- ed one hundred, was largely that of chil- drcn. The Town of Syzran is still burning. The deaths are calculated at hundreds. There are immense ï¬res also at Alathyn and Atkarsk. Hundreds of houses in each town have been destroyed. Thou- sands of persons are camping out. It is believed that all the ï¬res are of incen- diary origin. In southwestern Manitoba the harvest is expected to begin during the ï¬rst. week in August. but there has been some. damage by hail out there: around Pierson 700 acres were destroyed. A despalch to the London Tribune from 5!. Petersburg says that the Jews at Syzran are being massacrgd.» A dcspatcli from Odessa says: Gen. Kaulhurs, Governor-General of Odessa. issued a notice Friday warning all work- men on strike that if they fail to re- turn to work by Monday they will no exiled. Every attempt to prolong 'iio strike will be mercilessly suppressed. Honored by Steamship Company- Possessor to Cross Atlantic. A despatch from Montreal says: It is seldom that a steamship company honors a ticket issued more than 30 years ago, and yet a case of this kind has just occurred. In May. 1875, when the Montreal Ocean Steamsz Com- pany. from which the Allen Line was evolved, held sway, a Miss Robertson. of Glasgow, purchased a ticket from Glasgow to Quebec, with the intention of crossing the Atlantic. Circumstances arose. however, which prevented her coming. but she retained the ticket. Some weeks ago she conceived the idea. of taking the trip. and, having the ticket in her possession. she had it. forwarded to the Messrs. Allan. by whom it has been honored, and who have issued another ticket in its stead. The old ticket is regarded as a great curiosity. A large landed proprietor named Dro- hm'fsky and his family wandered {or days across the ï¬elds before they reach- ed Voroneth. killed and wounded. but the horde stubbornly refused to retreat. The apt preach of masses of peasants by other roads made the position of the troops untenable, and they retreated. leaving the estates defencelcss. The Govern- ment has sent artillery to the scene. The railway stutioné are packed with fugitives. and landlords and their {am- ilics raremramping by the roadsidcs. Charge Against Gall Man Reduced to Felonious “banding. A Gait desputch says: The charge of- attcmpt to murder was on Thursday. reduced to one of felonious wounding, at. the instance of the Crown Attorney, in the case of John Joseph Groves,, who stabbed William West. hostler at the new Royal Hotel, on the 10th inst.. in the course of an altercation. It was shown in evidence that. West had pro- voked Groves by calling him names, and had also attackcq him. The latter. who had a jackknite‘I-n his hand, retaliated, plunging the weapon eight times into West's body. He was convicted and sentenced to 18 months in the 0mm Prison by Judge Blake. , , A despalch from Madrid sans: King Alphonso and Queen Victoria drove in an automobile on Wednesday from La Granja to San Sebastien. where they will pass the summer. The entire route was lined by gendarmes owing to toe receipt of menacing anommous letters, declaring that anolher attempt on the lives of their Majeslies was imminent. The expulsion of Anarchist suspects from Spain continues. King Alphonso and "is Bride Go to - TICKET THIRTY YEARS OLD. BO UTE BARLEY CUTTING BEGINS. TO\‘\'N A SEA OF FIRE. EXILE FOR S’I‘RIKERS. STABBBR SENTENCE). MASSACRE OF NEWS. “'ITH