A despatch from Sebastopol say: AutSentic details have come to light | who | nth | fleet, threw aside his spade and fled. “ago, sain complicity in Aollall def then towed Bee a Se of the water pai filled with eaige and rebur- Che next day this mine was explod- ed in a field near Sebastopol with ter- the last tunnel, si is 160 yards ‘iong. On the Sebastopol side of the e destroyed both the train and the tun- tunnel there is a el fa pipe $k h MARKETS OF THE WORLD Frices of faite 0 Cheese, Grain, &e ae Markets, THE STREET MARKET. Toronto, Oct, 22.—On the street to- day 200 bushels ‘white wheat sold at 89; 200 bushels red wheat at 69 to 69 1-20; 700° bushels goose wheat at 680; 2,500 bushels per pe “ = 48 1-20; 800 bushels oats rye at 58 1-20, and a ee ‘of buck- wheat at 471-2c, Fifteen loads of hay sold at $13 to $142 -ton, and two loads of straw at $12.50 to $13, Dressed hogs were easier at $7.75 to $8. ‘heat, wit aah $ es $ heat, r i 1-2 00 00 9 ag = 8 rr ai BEPE = ® It is recalled that in the course of the enquiry at Rome into the assassin-| > ation of King Humbert it was found that the international group to which and who belongs to the ane vigilance and Taba, af guards pro- “was dates worms for anions but ae the Czar have now been in- @ colonel of gendarmes susp-cted that he was engaged in no innocent work, and had TUESTION GRAVE AS EVER}, SETTLEMENT OF CHINESE TROUBLE D. POLICE RAID “CHABROL,” _ HOUSE OF NOTORIOUS GUERIN Eliot aes te . xin bie Bie deen th plies to-day unexpectedly raided the notorious “Fort-Chabrol” in Paris, and| , despatch ses Tondon, Wetaes still in connection with chile af- Lee. pica that a solution of the a i the view that is ere ctialiy gesal . _ other High Court conspiracy trial.” ae ——>——_ WALTER GORDUN CAPTURED, |" THE MURDERER OF TWO MANITOBA FARMERS, settlement is the reatBPation of the Provincial Deiectives Sart for the Scene of His Arrest. is to ae ‘upon his production i in tee pt Chief of Provincial Police Elliott and pull ie tombs of the kings will be demolished and the Manchu dynasty restored the punishment of the guilty have the whole nation behind him. simistic regarding the probability of tl Chi: te from official sonrees as to where the denied that the man Gordon is cap- ured. BRITISH LOSSES SEVERE. Three Officers and Eight Men Killed, 28 Woun Lord Roberts ‘reports trom: Pretoria, under-date of Oct. 15, as follows ;— “French started from Machadodorp towards Heidelberg to clear a part of the country not yet visited by our 0) Maho British Collecting All Cattle in the Bloemof District. ee cupied without opposition, the Boers mopapel troops, gee Set ee were severe, three citar and eight “district, dep vehfob receipts have been! were severe, three officers and eight en. thi e) i would aie greatly helped to starve led. “French occupied Carolina yester- 01 his "PLAGUE VESSEL AT FALMOUTH. Ee Roberts also reports a num- nun Infected dotinds ene oe yer Rody | the Boers are still active over a wide ands crque ‘ield. « tse ee Paimouth, Bog. 31 KILLED IN THIS FIGHT. fanaa at this port. eight seaman suf- body —_ Boers Make a Suceessful Descent on Jagersfontein. fering from Eres ae the condition, in latitude 48 and longi-| “A party of Boers got into Jagers- tude 25 and | fontein on the Bien of October 16, six of the crew of the Homewood re-| and a fight Our loss was eleven Killed.'‘The ‘Boers Hi ‘The Norwegian barque Homewood is | killed. Pa despatched 4 column | eres fe} x 6 5 # i=] i 5 nmomamaccscescokEsooe eef, hin quarters. eet, tore quarter: eof, oaroasy tton. amb, spring, per wb. eal, carcas essed hogs. DRESSED Hoas AND PROVISONE Dressed hogs were about 250 a wt. lower on th abbas to-day, sales has made at $7.75 to $8. Provisions 88. ssssss long clear bacon, loose, in car lots, 100, and in case lots, 101-4 to 101-2¢; short cut pork, $19.50 to $20; heavy mess, $17.50 to $18. 2 Smoked meats—Hams, heavy, 1 medium, 121-2 to 130; light, 181-203 breakfast bacon, 13 to 181-20; picnic ms, 100; roll bacon, 1c; smoked backs, 13. All meats out of pickle 1c less than prices quoted for smoked meats, i Lard—Tierces, 10¢; tubs, 10 to 10 1-40; pails, 10 1-4 to 10 1-20. PRODUC Eggs—Prices and conditions un- —Fresh 17 1-2 to 18¢; held 16c. limed 160; and culls, 9 to : Poultry—Receipts are larger and prices easier. Quotations are as Tol- lows :—Chickens, per pair, 85 to 450 ducks, per pair, 40 to 60c; turkeys, per Ib. 10 to 1lo; and geese, per Ib., 6 to 7c. Geese sold principally at 6'to 6 1-205 Potatoes—Market steady, Car lots, on track, are quoted at 28 t# 300 per out of store, are made at 35 to 400. Field, produce, ete.—Turnips, out of store, 500 per bag; onions, 60c- ; apples, per bbl., 500 to $1. Sweet potatoes, per bbl. -| Dried fruits—Dried apples sell at 3 to 8 1-20; and evaporated at 4 1-2 to jeans—Ordinary run white beans bing $1.20 to $1.25. Choice hand-pick- ed beans are quoted at $1.40 to $1.45. ey—There seems to be a good supply of strained honey on the mark- et, and best price obtainable is 9 1-2c. Pa mostly at 9c. Dealers quote from 9 to 9 1-20 per lb for 5, 10, or 60- order, Comb honey ale at $2.25 to $2.50 per dozen sec DAIRY ee Butter—There is no change in the ysituation. | Creameries continue Second quality dairy-is in rather full supply and sells slowly. Commis- te houses sell to the trade as fol- lows;—Dairy, tubs, and pails, choice, 17 to 180; and second quality, ae to 15c; dairy prints, choice, send boxes, 20 to 2ie; and settee 22 to 2 NRE cream, July and Aug- ust makes, ~ at 1 to U. Detroit, ee 22.—Wheat—No. 1 white, cash, 75c; No. 2 red, cash, 770; October, 77c; December, a er, 76 1-2c ; Decembe and October, 771-40; December, 9c; Eee ponres ee a pester imber says: Gen. French has ocoupied Gavaline Tt |qme siramncena's att TO RESUME MASSACRES, Another Edict Sent to the Sent to the Mandarnis by Prince Tuan. a despateh from London says;—j Peiho is frozen the cold will decimate E despatch to Dalziel’s News Agency | the allies, while the falling of the rom Shanghai, of yesterday's date, | Yang-tse-Kiang will only admit of says Prince Tuan has sent a despatch | the use of small gunboats. to the mandarins and heads of guilds He urges that the arsenals be kept in Shanghai, announcing that the | constantly at work, and that every- court is now hae a exhorting them | one be in readiness when ‘the moment to have patie: oe for the massacre of all for- The wana tok Ace that when: the | eigner St. Loni: pe oe eA ae hace ae GENERALS ARE RETURNING % epee Oct. 22.—Wheat was higher | tae ls HUTTON SAIL Lite LAND. early on cables, but reacted gatas on| Poor support. December closing 1-80, lower; corn closed 1-4 to 3-50, and | Pesotntion Altres ay Wrought by Gucrillag oats 1-8 to 1-4c down. Provisions un-| Take Year to Redee changed to 5¢ a. ary ch from Londongenyae tie n war has again spread The heaviest fatalities of year ago. “Local receipts were 155 Colony. The outlook 1s dismal for an cars, three of contract grade. Esti- eatly re-umption o/ farmiag and min- mated receipts to-morrow;—Wheat, ing- The desolation already wrouga hogs, 25,000 head. Match, $1.21 bid.' British Generals are returning. mee Seek Dolls Chermside and Hutton, as weil as 78c ; No. 2 Northern, | Buller, are ali on their is to Eng- Rye—Dull; No. oi hpesiy 58. Barley—Sieady ; No. 2, 57c; gam-} A draggl ng guerilla warare threats ple, 40 to 560. ens serious social sequels Cape 7: Minneapolis, 02+. 17. save Nap it Town and Durban. 163-8 to 7 ugees there are now penniless and May, 791-8 to 791-40; on track, Not lidestitate: and riots are probable if 1 hard, 781-4; No. 1 Northern, 771-40; they are not allowed to return in a No, 2 do., 741-4 to 75 1-4. | few weeks. This is impossiole, as the Duluth, Oct. 22.—Wheat closed: No. plight of those in the Transvaal 1s 1 hard, cash, 800; to arrive, 80c; Oc-| even worse. tober, 80¢; December, 801-8¢; May,! ‘The military position has been ma- 830; No. 1 Northern, cash, 78; 0/terially unchanged for a month. The arrive, 78; October, 78; December, | British hold all the key positions, but No. 8 spring, Wc. Corm—401-4c. Oais Boers from gathering and sweeping —23 1-2 to 230. | dowa upon weak garrisons. The Boer! s Toledo, Oct. 22—Wheat—No. 2 cash! are now acting on their individual in- itiative, without a Government or 24| without orders from the commandant- z+[aoneril: | Thave ia a Season toe ESS prime, $6.12 1-2; 1899, sista Milner is at Pretoria studying the $6.25; October, $7.20; December, §7. toughest problem of his life. He knows Oil—Unchanged. that more Boers are under arms thana fortnight ago, and that the military ain the allegiance of the burgherr through’ their incapacity. BELT eT “|LARGE COMMANDO ROUTED, |district commissioners have failed to % # Es — ee 7 DISTINSUIEREL THEMSELVES. A despatch from ae Big Boer Convoy is hoped with his force and the col- ‘dana ‘River. umn which Gen. Smith-Dorrien is con-| ‘A desp: toh from Durban, says:~. centrating in that neighbourhood to|Stratheona’s Horse have recently had surround and capture a large number some startling experiences in the Sel f Boers. Former President Steyn, of the {distinguished themselves upon every Orange Free State, and Commander-|0ccasion. “While patrolling the Sand iby Botha are agora to be at river, they gained intelligence from o Belf: |trustworthy source that there was + Gen Saito has had an engagement Boer convoy ahead. They immediatel~ with 1,500 Boers at Welvediend. He Started tin pursuit, and by a forced killed five of them and scattered the ,march along a circuitous route suo commando. He also captured 1,000 ceeded in reaching a drift just as the co Be- Bena ce cha \convoy was preparing to er Gen. Clements has made a great raid ee that another British patrol , aS arranged, supporting the! on cattle which the Boers were driv- | See Waly fhe Meealioainey space iStratheona' s Horse attacked the Boers. | the cther patrol did BOERS AT BLOEMFONTEIN not arrive in time to help, and the at- ltack failed. (Had the support acted as a d the whi fe Small Betish Foree ige Contpellesl to, Ree ite Hew ues Lee ith Nine Wounded. leat tle Boers were badly mauled, and A ne from Pretoria, says;—|ceaped with difficulty. Kelly-Kenny reports Captain C. G-| Subsequent to this » adventure a Henty, 16th, London Irish, Rifle Bri- trooper of Strathcona’s Horse and “a gade, endeavoured to surprise a party | native Lopes to the corps were kill- of Boers near eee but the |eq.by party turned out be stronger iinwid sxpeited: Smad Wits “helas force had to retire, which it did un-| LORD ROBERTS REPORTS molested after three hours’ fighting. Our losses were nine wounded, includ- ing’ Lieut. Siater, 57th. Co., eee Several Engagements With Guerill. Bands. A despatch from London says ;— In a despatch from Pretoria, Lord Roberts says Thounis Botha, a bro- ther of the Boer commander-in- chief, surrendered on Saturday. Lord: Roberts also gives the detail lon Mounted Infantry, reported miss- ing, is believed to be dea Henty see that the Boars suf- fered_heavil of four recent skirmi ishes. In one of these the British had Lieut. Attfield” and two men killed, and in another the Boers had six killed. gee Bethune’s Force Kills 60, Wounds 35 and Cap- BURIED GUNS. tures the Rest of the Commando Near Vryheid. —_|creusots and Pom-Poms Unearthet b: rere despatch from London says: A despatch to the Central News from Durban states that Bethune’s Mount-— 6. mand thereby ise cut the stige y the British. ma of their own similar disaster dur- A despatch from Lorenzo Mar- ing General es nae norih-/ ques, says;—The search for buried Bere from Ladysmi arms has resulted im the unearthing ‘APTURED rrr BOE at Hector spruit of two pom-poms ané A Sects from Cape Bee ssys| two Creusot guns. The remainder of the British re-entered Bloemhof, near | the 15-pounders and Krupp field gum rley, October 14, unopposed a-d have all been found alongside fdgkercat 50 Boers. ! Qrecodile river. OBEDIENCETO GOD'S LAW! Rev. Dr. Talmage Says That Half 1d, Coan tae ties bie amlene foe more comfortable ce will be; bat. you Dr. What meaneth oe this “bleating of the sheep in mine ears, and the low- | that kind is of immense damage to conquered God, and that He would | handful of worms in the planks may For four hundred years this had ae | expose him just as thoroughly aid; “God either though He branded upon his forehead has been successful im the decep- go down and slay all the Amalekites, not | ment, the leaving one of them alive; also to |oxen will below. Oh, my dear friends, destroy all the beasts in their pos- | let us cultivate simplicity of Gietasless The Amalekites and Israelites meet ; | you be the trumpets of battle blow peal on|cannot enter E Kingdom of pesl, and there is a death hush. Then} We may there is a signal waved, swords cut | nowy but the oie God willy after a into the dust. Gash after gash; frenzied yell; the gurgling of throt-|of Jesus Christ ,the screen has already tled throats; the ery of pain; t the curse hissed heaven are gazing on our hypocrisy. army’s God's universe is a very public place, and you cannot hide hypocrisy in i and mouths |Going out into a world of dolaalon and yet grinning vengeance. “Hugra for the |shame, pretend to be no more dleath-groan: Stacks of dead on all wave pr plumes and | of God, profess it. clap their shields, for ase aug God Yet that victorious army ‘of Israel | [Bzepaate in the church, there are inv he: ndred outside of it, for the reason | |, a! lehat the field is larger. There are men in all circles who aH bow before you, sence, and tall flatteringly, but who, sion; but Saul, thinking that he knows | all the while they are in your conver- more than God saves Agag, the Ama-| lekite king and a fine drove of sheep | and a herd of oxea that he cannot solemn than the genuine hypocrite— |" I learn, further from this subject save the sheep, the army did it; trying and the lowing of the cattle which I age ot throw off the responsibility of any sin that blushes would have consumed the upon! the ae oe othe er people. He 10 mother who was a disciple of Godless shion takes the sword. and he alanis reas to Pieces; and then he takes the skirt enough in the world to see what ‘sins pus his father or mother, but | will have to stand for himself and an- disobeying God won aflock of sheep I learn first, from this subject that God will expose hypocrisy. Here Saul |] a pretends he has fulfilled the Divine belonging to the Amalekites, and yet, off your sins upon the shoulders of other merchants. God will hold’ you ——— for what you do, and them story and practising the delusion, the secret comes out, and the sheep bleat A hypocrite is one who pretends to 2 quote one passage of Seripture | for k i and during his public devotion shows I learn, fread ‘titn this subject a great deal of the whites of his eyes. it to imply that all the race are sinners, with one exception, hie modesty for- not stay in a soul that is half His and e Aga Her. re a scuristian who g SAYS; gi! wil drive out pray, look out for your chickens, The that Amaiekite. Here is. backbiting, down goes that Amalekite. “And what slaughter he makes among his ins, striking right and left. What is that out yonder lifting up his head9 it is Agag—it is worldliness. It is an Lord. I know men who are living with their souls in perpetual commun- ion with Christ, and day by day are walking within the sight of heaven to bleat and bellow for exposure and condemnation. Christ will not stay in the house with Agag. You must fattest; and there are Christians who have slain the most unpopular of their trangressions and saved those which are most respectable. It will not do. Eternal war against all the Amale- kites; no merey for Agag. I learn, further, from this subject God out of thosd sheep and oxen; but he lost his crown—he lost his empire. You cannot cheat God. How often it has been that Christian men have had a large estate, and it has gone. ‘The Lord God came into the count- ing-house, and said; “I have allowed for help, you had no mercy. I onl ae I will take it all.” God asks of us one seventh of our time in the she ee Sabbath. Do you suppose get an hour of that time coat away from its true object? No, no. od Reavedhuy lriply iat theyiane eens aly ae ry Poe ee of ime that is to be devoted to God’s ti service and instead of keeping His Sab- bath use it for the purpose. of writing your accounts, or making worldly gains, God will certainly bring you t a man attempt to do that which God forbids him to do, or to get out into a place where God tells him not to go—the natural world as well as Godis against him. The lightnings are ready to strike him; he fires a im. whose princely robes are woven out of heart-strings; those whose fine houses are built out of skulls; those whose springing fountains are the tears of oppressed nations—have they successfully cheated God? The last day will demonstrate. It will be found out on that day that God vin- .,| dicated not only His goodness and His mercy, but His power to take care of His own rgibts, and the rights of His our fellows, we never have success- fully robbed God. My Christian friends, as you go out into. the world, exhibit an open- hearted Christian frankness. Do be your soul. Have no mercy on Agag. Down with your sins—down with ake pride—down with your worl know youycannot achisve cht nr in the pit, that which delivered Dan- iel in the den, that which shielded Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, that which cheered Paul in the ship- wreck. oh agree BY AN AUTHORITY. These here people make me weary!” exclaimed Wayside William. The people that’s talkin’ about nae on fifteen Sa aday. Why, in places wo ery at all TOUS, taint no Feet 0 live on emer noes a os I know, ‘cause . ‘ve done —_>—_ Sometimes is it the cashier that gets the best of the run on the bank. This is the season of the year wh ‘© genuine religion a man has, the you can get what you don’t want rc te he ; ly ¢ What people? demanded Tired Timo- y= ~ MECHANICAL DOCTORS. Disciples oF Esculapius May Mefore Le Disappear. ‘ere doctors will soon be medical memories only, for mechanical doctor- -|ing has made its appearance and has proven most beneficial in many in- stances. Many ailments are cured en- tirely, or much alleviated by the * movement cure,” It is largely prac- ticed in various continental health re- sorts, where it is known as Le Me- chanotherapic. Some seventy ma- trapped on to a machine, a lever is turned that sets it in motion, and the wrist is twist- ed in a half circle backwards and for- wards, probably very slowly and gent- ly at first, but as it grows more flex- ible at the rate, perhaps, of twenty turns to the nrinute. Or an old gentleman is to be treat- ed whose waist is no longer as supple as in the days of his youth. He is placed in a kind of rocking chair, the er is too lazy, or too weak, to do the work for himself. Not least among the wonders of the & again” machines, which work like a refreshing tonic on jaded and weary bodies. One machine, for in- stance, consists of a series of little cloth-covered hammers, arranged in a create a warm, invigorating glow. Vibrations are applied to the spine by a series of rubber fingers, which are made to run up and down, tap- ping merrily away like a woodpecker on a branch, only the taps fail at the rate of hundreds in a minute, rain of little blows fromm the vibrat- ing machine, produ st pleas- ant, though peculiar sensation; and brings a speedy en applied to a head that feels heavy and con- gested. The kneading treatment is af-|, forded by a machine which works two little sae over oe body with a “Ikneading ” mov eee SNAP SHOT: The killing of a bird with a @un seems little short of murder, Biter, one in the event of success, it is perpetu- ated by the infinitely more satisfac- tory results obtained. What menta! yision of falling birds can be as pol- ent as the actual picture of living birds in their homes? And how im- ened by the fact that this ae ae a what is. peace ior ad THE FIRST DOLLAR. Oh, yes, I have always kept ne es dollar I ever made. It was bum piece of work that Palau And the counterfeiter laughed hearty at the recollection. WAS A DRUNKARD — A Lady Who Cures Her Her Husband ot inkiny cesta he el Barantin srs mn I cen believe it will a the worst Let us have faith that right makes to do our duty as we understand it.— Knowledge and timber shouldn’t be The re preatoat of fee I should say, is $o ba conscious of none,—Carlyle. After the frost ve killed the tops measurably one’s memories are bright-| picture of what has been, of € C) long as possible, in order that growth may become thoroughly ma- wonderful facts some women’s tongues moust be The Young Grow Old ae Their ine gor necess: lamentable is youthful. infirmity, eve: éanaltiia is lack S| mn I —cheerful, bright, ‘eran A How (heard of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, used the Sy ko cause, the. heal not @ Foree—nerve | highly for Weak, nervous people. trait and signature : Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. jared in Soudansed: ye eee on every Lox is PR the pore he Sets, a box, at ‘altdealers or ‘Edlnauaon eer & Co. Toro: