West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 24 Aug 1899, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Ras »a€ has recovered 3 The Loodon Times has been grantâ€" ed an injunction restraining a pubâ€" lisher named Lane from reâ€"printing speeches of Lord Rosebery admittedâ€" ly takey from the Times. The Marquis of Londonderry has announced the engagement of his son and heir, Viscount Castlereagh, to Miss Edith Chaplin, eldest daughter of the Rt. Hon. Henry Chaplin. The French schooner Pauebote was sunk by the steamer Hercules off the English coast on Saturday, and nine persons were drowned. The secretary of Sir Thomas Lipton‘s compiny, has been committed for trial at London charged with being in posâ€" session of fruit unfit for use. Ze". Fobveries in the Strand and other outrages which terrorized London a few months ago. Naturalized aliens are not eligible for peerage in England, and (Mr. Wm. Astor, therefore, can only become a baronet or a knight. & There has been a light robberies in the & outrages which terro: le!v' months ago. Lightning struck a marc ment at Limerick, Ireland seriously injuring two off seven privates. Motor wagons are being put to severe tests at Liverpool, and Liverâ€" pool city has adopted motor dust wagons. Andrew Carnegie has 000 to found a public lib ley, Yorkshire. don for tember. ghan war. Word was received in Woodstock Monday of the death in Natal, South Africa, of Mr. W. G. Boyes, who previous to nine years ago, was a proâ€" minent book and stationary merchant in Woodstock. _ Deceased was about 10 years of age, and died of paralysis. He was amajor in the British army, and had seen active service in the Afâ€" se Wt Mr. George Brown, a photographer, was charged at Winnipeg police court with following his business on the Lord‘s Day, when asked if guilty or not guilty, said be would plead guilty to working on Sunday, but not on the Lord‘s Day, as that was not Sunday. He is a Seventh Day Adventist. lhe biggest robbery that Dawson has known for several months was ‘ommitted two weeks ago Sunday, a wellâ€"known Victorian being the vicâ€" tim. _ While Gowan, of King and Gowan‘s saloon, was dozing in the bar some one camas in and stole $1,500 in gold dust and cash. Mr John Baird, private banker of Lynden, iyas met with a peculiar and serious experience. An ingrowing toeâ€" nail led to bloodâ€"poisoning, and â€" the amputation of the toe, and now it is feared, as the wound is not bhealing satisfactorily, that the foot will have to come off Two Freachmen in the employ of the Mon{real _ Trans,oriation Company have been captured in Kingsion smugâ€" gling dress goods, tobacco and cigarâ€" ets. ‘They were acting for a party in Mont real. A carriage containing Col. Leys, M. P. P., and Mr. Chittick of Dorchester was struck by a trolley car at London on Saturday. The borse ran away and the occupants of the carmage . were thrown out and severely hurt. ‘ The old Music Hall of Dundas street, London, formerly the Mechanâ€" tos Hall, has neen turned into a handâ€" some, upâ€"toâ€"date theater, the interior having been completely remodelled. Drill books for the cavalry, artillery and infantry have been issued to dis trict officers commanding for free disâ€" tribuiion to militia units. _ One copy goes to each officer and sergeant. Robert Hunter and Herman Reinâ€" holt, two Hamilton Klondikers, are bome again, without a cent to show for their long trip of two years over the Edmonton trail. A comservative estimate of the Yuâ€" kon output places it as low as ten millions, but other estimates place it at from twelve to fiftsen millions. Ferfdinand Lemieux, exâ€"accountant, bas takem ut an‘ action for $10,000 wu'msl. Fred. W,. Smith and the Ville aric Bank for false arrest. The Canadian Development Comâ€" pany has landed passengers in Dawâ€" son in six days from Vancouver and ten and a bhalf from Ottawa. The Wentworth County authorities are after & racing pool room, which has been operated for some iime just outside of" Hamfliton. Hilda Blake, the Brandon murderâ€" ess, takes her confinement in jail very éoolly. Eie is now engaged on her sutobiography. > The water in the St. Lawrence River near Kingston has gone down twelve inches within the past ten days. The Northern Pacific Railway hauf let conmiracts forits Portage la Prairie | branch of Lake Manitoba. | Dr. Howard Sharman, a young denâ€" tist, was drowned by the upsetiing of his canoe at Winnipeg. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Smyth, of Midâ€" ford, Muskoka, celebrated their golden wedding last week. summer. Brantford may shortly have a facâ€" tory J6r the manufacture of bog peat for fuel. The telegraph lins to Dawson will llke_l:vl be completed by the end of next Samples of new â€" wheat, oats and rye shown at Hamilton are unusually CANADA. J. H. Todd, millionaire merchant of Victoria, is dead. Winnipeg has raised the salary nfits Q.!el of police to $2,600. Prince of Wales has left Lonâ€" c Marienbad, to return in Sepâ€" The Great Northâ€"west Central Railâ€" ay is to be extended 25 miles this GREAT BRITAIN 2. ... 00. 0000 ommc n atome samenssconpeganietnn n been a revival of dayâ€" y Ts sX â€" mek & s " ews Summary. lreland, Saturday two officers and A marcnmg regi- + Sm ripatsin 1as donated $50,â€" library at Keighâ€" y e K sanil, [ . * '.pv:@i{}’fl" " 9 ,!fi‘ s l imen desiegation to «nce at Tue Hague Recent Happenings Briefly Told. Through the fai‘ure his agont, Paut V in D Ruâ€"siin, worth $18,500,( bankrupt, and will save 000 from the wreck. The Spanish court martial has, by a majority of one, acquitted (Gen. Toral nd other officers tried for surrenderâ€" inz Santiago to the Americans, American delegates to the Peace Conference will commemorate the conâ€" ferense by the erection of a perce chape! near the English church at The Germainy has begun a new type of torpedo boats, larger than the old style, which have been found unseaâ€" worthy. Bulgaria is financially embarrassed, In consequence of the ki:ling of a French fisherman by the Leda a numâ€" ber of English visitors at Bulogne were mobbed last week, Many lives are reported been lost and great damage property by the hurricane in Indies. °/ 3045 af5fed that the Filipinos deâ€" mand $7,000,000 for the release of the Spanish prisoncrs in their hands. Herr Woif, tha Germain Liberal Deâ€" puty to th> Austrian Reichsrath, was ‘everely wounded in a savage duel. The Czar has decorated M. Delcasse, "rench Minister of Foreign Affairs, with the order of St. Alexander NeW-‘ ski. ihe report that China a concluded an alliance is a despatch from Rome. It is asserted that the mand $7,000,000 for the r Spanish prisonâ€"rs in thei: Seventeen cases of 1 in a murder trial now Temesvar, in Hungary, Filipinos have captured â€" ihe United States steamer Her crew are missing, It is said that 30000 Finlanders are considering the question of seltling in Newfoundland. The French Government has prohiâ€" bited furiher fights between bulls and wild beasts. The Americans have cap‘ured San Mateo, ten miles from Manila, after a stiff fight. Russia may take; st King Milan from Ser A carpenters‘ strike greatest labour crisig £ Denmark, The bubonic plague has reappeared in Calcutta. Fierce rioting has occurred in Salzâ€" burg, Austria, Four additional fatalities are reportâ€" ed from the Alps,. Russia may take; steps to expel exâ€" Winc MEIL . k /.\ k & tr , Three soldiers of the Mth Infantry, | stationed at Fort Logan, Colorado, raised a distrubance in a saloon. ‘I‘wo policemen named Thomas Clifford and W. E. Griffin, were shot and instantly killed by one of the soldiers for atâ€" tempting to arrest him. A report at Cleveland says the biâ€" cycle trust of the United States will not only reduce selling and manufacâ€" turing expenses, but will set out to. capture the world‘s markets. Methods will be changed, but the names _ and styles of the various wheels now made will be retained. ue Robert O‘Shea, 46 years old, a portor at the Union Hotel, Niagara Falls, N. Y., committed suicide, by jumping from the Cantilever bridge that spans the gorge. He was intoxicated at the #Â¥eiew 4( _ The Red Star steamer Kensington is quarantined at New York." It has a case of smallpox on board. Regular and volunieer U. S. troops indulged in a riot at Fort McPherson Ga., and eight soldiers were wounded. Four young men drank wood alsohol at a picnic, and died in Elkland, Tioga county, Pa. es n y t Britain has arranged a convention with the United States on behalf of [ Trinidad, admitiing certain United States products duiy free into Triniâ€" | dad, and reducing United States duties on certain articles 12 1â€"2 per cent., l‘while granting the United States favâ€" ored nation treatment. The scheme of Lord Curzon of Kedâ€" leston, Viceroy of India, respecting frontier defence has been approved by the Imperial Government. It provides for the withdrawal of t‘e râ€"gau ars ‘r m many frontier garrisons and the sub-‘ stitution of tribal militia, which will result in large economy. UNITED STATES, A detachment of 100 marines have been sent to Manila. * h nmess, tne number of lunatics in Engâ€" land Wates being 155,086, an inâ€" crease of 3114 in a year. The spread is largest among paupers. Sir Aifred Hickman, in the British House of Commns, condemned the practice of the Indian authorities purâ€" chasing railway material in the United States, declaring that while English engines cost more, they were better and lasted longer. The fiftyâ€"third anmuaal report of the British Commissionars _ of Lunacy shows en appalling increase of madâ€" lapsed and fell like a stone in the presence of a vast crowd, but the cordage caught on a house and the four occupants escaped with a severe shaking up. that Chinq and Japan have tar‘ure of ventures by V in Derviss, a young $18,500,000, has become captured and burned trike has caused the crisis in the history Snrvia reported to have poisoning figure being heard at at most $3000,â€" confirmed by re _ caused to in the West Saturnas A despatch from Deseronto, Ont., says:â€"Baturday night about 7 o‘clock a young ‘mimigrant, named Wm. Davis, undressed on Cedar . Mill dock here and jumped into the bay and did not again appe>> on the purface. Some yowag lad ho were in the vicinity gave the a _ in, and a rescue party reâ€" covered the body in about 10 minutes, but life was extinct. The young man had only been in town a few days, and it is said he was not mentally sound. A despatch from Winnipeg says :â€" The iM. and N. W., railway crop report, issued on Wednesday, _ shows that wheat un the northâ€"western portion of th~ province is rather more backward than in Central and Southern Maniâ€" toba, but the grain is ripening fast, and harvesting will be general by the andof the month. The estimated yield from all points rum:s from 25 to 30 bushels per acre, the crop being very heavy. Wheat Fighting Arose Over the Celebration of the Relief of Derry. A despatch from Londonderry, says: â€"The Protestant celebration of the anniversary of the Relief of Derry, beâ€" sieged by James IL.‘s army in 1689, led to riotous scenes here on Sunday. An excursion party, composed of 400 ‘mvmhers of a ‘98 club, arrived from B=!fast, but the police refused to allow the excursionists to enter the city. The appearance of a Nationalist band to meet the party caused disorders and stoneâ€"throwing. Both mobs attacked the police. Finally the Riot Act was read, and the Mayor of Londonderry called out the garrison. Eight conâ€" stables were seriously injured. The rioting was renewed in the evening on the departure of the excursionists, in the vicinity of the railway station, The police made repeated baton chargâ€" es, and several persons were in jnred oung Man Msrobes Nes e P eee (Og â€" DE in the bank on the night of the robbery, It is understood that Chief Genest noiified _ Provincial Detective Jos, Rogers that he had arrested _ men against whom he had proof implicating them in the crime. Their names are given as James Collins, Wm. Hastings John Murray, William Gilmour, Wilâ€" liam Johnson, and Pat Ryan. The men were arrested and convictâ€" ed of vagrancy, and during their term Chiefl Genest has been able to work out hin mlecs his clues. Alleged That the Perpetrators are in Custody at Hull, , A despatch from Ottawa, Ont., says: â€"The Standard Bank o‘ficials bhave been notified, it is alleged, that the mystery surrounding the robbery _ of $11,000 on May 13th last from the Bowâ€" manville branch bhas been cleared up, and six men are now in Hull goal who have been identified by the night watchman as having been seen by him! in the bank An the mirlkt a# L. 081"" IL ate delivery. The concern will have a capital of twentyâ€"five millions, prinâ€" cipally English. The price to be paid for the General Mining Association coal mines is not stated. WILL AVERAGE 25 BUSHELS, and the General Mining Association. The latter is the oldest coal company in Cape Breton. The directors are Englishmen. Its mines are at North Sydney. A representative of the Nova Scotia Steel Company has been in Engâ€" land for some time consulting with the directors of the coal company. The new concern‘s plant at North Sydâ€" ney will include a shipâ€"building plant,. steel rail plant and dock. The comâ€" pany owns iron mines at Belle Isl», Newfoundland, and it is said that three hundred thousand tons of ore have been sold in Europs for immediâ€" An English Company to Erect;iOne at North Sydney, C. B. ' A despatch from Sydney, C.B., says : â€"Another huge iron and steel works, eclipsing=even â€" the Whitney â€" estabâ€" lishment now being erected at Sydney will be located at North Sydney. ln-‘ formation has been received from Engâ€" land that a deal is about to be conâ€" summated to merge the Nova Scotia‘ Steel Company, of New Glasgow, N.S., | SUICIDE AT DESERONTO. |ers, organiced a militia company, the ‘ head of which is Ross Thompson, who |laid out the towny of Rossland. AÂ¥ carâ€" ‘load of rifles and two machine guns | have been obtained. BOWMANVILLE BANK ROBBERY. RIOTING AT LONDONDERRY _ _Last winter the British Columbia Pariisment passed a law prohibiting the working of men in mines mors than eight hours per day. The rate was $3.50 for ten hours. The Rossland mineâ€"owners offered $3 per «day for eight hours, and proposed in the event this was refused to introduce the conâ€" tract system. . At a meeting of the miners these terms were rejected. The mine owners, fearing that the Coeur d‘Alene spirit was rifq among the minâ€" in Idaho, have resolved through their miners union not to accept the wages offered by the British Ameriean Corâ€" poration, owner of the LeRoi and Cenâ€" tre Star and other big mines, and Gooderham and Blackstock, owners of the War Eagle and other properties, the principal mine owners of the dis-‘ trict. Â¥ield in Manitoba w mous This Year. A despatclg from Rossland, B. C., says:â€"The largest mining camp in the Northâ€"West is on the verge of the bigâ€" gest miners‘ strike in the history of this section. Six thousand miners, mostly Americans, and many of them lately from the Coeur d‘Alene district, HUGE IRON AND STEEL WORKS Miners in British Columbia are Arming, TORONTO and the Greatest Strike in the History of Canada is Feared. Jum;s to Death MAY BE A BIG STRIKE ewed in the evening > of the excursionists, f the railway station. repeated baton chargâ€" and llellber.ulely were injured. Will be Enorâ€" Aecâ€"Miss Deering always has a crowd of young men around her. She, enviously â€" Yos; they evidently think there is safety in numbers. ; Clara, you admit that we would be more comfortable at home in the hot weather. Yes, but everybody elso is gone, Who will see my new clothes? ( §000 e e RCEAAATISSECHES er Ogilvie the output of the Klondike mines this year will be $40,000,000. A despatch from Vancouver, says:â€" The steamer Rosalie, with 150 passâ€" engers brings in the neighbourhood of $3,000,000 in gold. According to the estimate of Canadian Gold Commissionâ€" er Ogilvie the outnut af tha Ila«_ai1~ Steamer Rosalle Lands $30,000,030 in Gold at Â¥xnceuver, The Canadian Pacific to Have a Fine Exâ€" hibit ar the Show., A despatch from Oiltawa, says:â€" Among our most notable exhibits at the Paris Fair of next year will be one from the Canadian Pacific Railway, which has reserved a space of 1,260 feet, that will be fitted up as a recepâ€" tion room, showing many of its best oil pain{ings, and displays of the natural resources of the country along the route. It is said the company will spend between $25,000 and 850,000] on the exhibit. wilth ueneral Mercier in order to deny some of his statements. Colonel Jouaust ordered the court to be adjourned until Monday at 6.30 a.m. for the confrontation, and as Mercier turned to leave the court the audience rose en masse and cursed him, those at the back of the court standing on chairs and benches in order to better how! him down. M. Casimirâ€"Perier then rose and draâ€" matically demanded to be confron{ed with General Mercier in order to deny some of his statements. KLONDIKE UQUTPUT $40,000,000. The audience burst into a wild cheer, whereupon the ushers called for silâ€" ence. _ But when Mercier replied that be would admit Dreyfus was innocent if there was any doubt, the prisoner shouted again: "Why don‘t you then?" At this there was another outburst of applause. Sensattona! Incldent at the Dreyfas Trial on Siturday Morning. A despatch from Rennes, says:â€"A stirring scene closed Saturday‘s sesâ€" sion of the Dreyfus trial. â€" General Mercier spoke nearly four hours in ruthless denunciation of Dreyfus, who had listened unmoved until Mercier concluded by saying that if he had not been convinced of the guilt of Dreyfus and if the latter‘s conviction had not been forilified since 1894, he would admit he had been mistaken. Dreyâ€" fus jumped to his feet as though the words had galvanized him into life and shouted in a voice which resoundâ€" ed through the hall like a trumpet note : “Y(_)_u ought to say so now." Increasing rotundity on thes part of the wife of a London haberdasher led her husband to cut off her supply of stout, of which she drank three pints a day. At this time she weighed 217 mlunds In six weeks sie had dwindâ€" led down to 180 pounds. Fearing that she would soon become a skeleton, she has begun proseedings for a divorce on account of his inhumanity. The air of Alaska seems to have a projilic effect on the human hair. When R. L. Smith went to the Klonâ€" dike, two years ago, he was almost bald. He has just returned to San Franvisco wilh a pleniiful crop of hair _A Fan Francisco tramp was arrestâ€" ed for vagrancy. Thie Magistrate askâ€" ed him who and what he was â€" He dramatically declared, "I am an honâ€" est manâ€"the nollest work of God." Homest men being scarce, the Judge thought he would put him in a place of safety, and sent hiim to jail for three months. A JOURNEY NBCESSARY. end of that time he was so bieached that he would pass for a white man. Three hens belonging to Dr. Shaw of Russellville, Ky., are ‘high flyers. They recently ascended 200 feet in the air in pursuit of a ‘hawk. _ When the noon whistles blow ithey quit scratchâ€" ing gravel and hasten home to dinner. _ _A sheep with five horns rambles around the farm of William Marston, in Cedar Springs, Ky. Two horns grow on each side of the head and one in the centre. . A negro conviot in an Austrian jail was conveyed to a Vienna hospital, and there experimenied upon with electricity, for four months. At the FEMININE CHARITY On each train of the new Siberian railroad there will be a stationary bicycle to afford exercise to the passâ€" engers and a barber who will shave them free of cost. A blacksmith in Grass Valley, Cal., decided to close ‘his career on the anâ€" niversary of his birthday, at the very bour of the day when he was born. He waited umil the clock struck eleven, and then committed suicide. In Asii, California, is an immense cistern lined with concrete two feet thick, for the storage of wine. Its capacity is 500,000 gallons. To lay the dust, on its roadbed the Boston and Maine Railroad runs a large vilâ€"sprinkler over its route. men ever die of consumption. The first balloon ascension was made by the Moonigolfiere brothers, in Lyons, France, June 5, 178% A Few Parngraphs Which Will Be Fourd Well Worth Reading. Linen was the first fabric weaved. Vegetarians have clearer complexâ€" ilons than people who eat animal food. It is a remarkable fact that few bald BIG SHOW AT PARIS. GEN. MERCIER HISSED, ITEMS OF INTEREST. Th hn on eerRiet says:â€"Reports from Southâ€"West Rusâ€" sia say the recent drought in that porâ€" tion of the country has caused the ut ter loss of the winter and Spring wheat emromn Uiter Loss of the Extensive Purchases by United States Breeders Promised, A despatch from London says :â€"Mr, Victor Cavendish, member of Parliaâ€" ment for West Derbyshire, in a speech before the Bakewell Farmers‘ Club on Wednesday evening, said that an Amâ€" erican Government official told him thal the next few years would see a large importation of English stock inâ€" to the United States for breeding purâ€" nnases. § 4 A despatch from Lindsay, Ont., says: Mr. James Greaves, conductor of the G, T. R. tra in running daily between here wnd Ooboconk, had a narrow escape from being shot while passing Wilson‘s siding, three miles this side of Coboâ€" conk, on Wednesday night. It is Mr. Greaves‘ custom to ascertain at the different points along the line on the up trip the number of cars to be taken on the down trip in the morning, and when passing Wilson‘s siding he was looking out of the closed window countinag the cars when he beard the report of a rifle and the frame of the sash through which he . was looking crashed in. On examination it was found thai the bullet passed through tha frame and out of an open window an the other side of the coach, passing within a fepy inches of the conducior‘s head. Everything points to it being a delibarate attempt on Mr. Greaves‘ life, and yet he himself cannot account far the affair wnless it was done by a tram w hom the conductor compel]â€" ed to pay his fare when stealing a ride a few rlays ago. Bupposed to Havre Been the Act of Tramy, But No Expianation as Where He Got Rifle. is full of drifting miners‘ shacks and other small baildings. People in the lowâ€"lying part of Edmonton are preâ€" paring to move, The water is now four feet over the bridge piers, and continues to rise. The historical steamer Northâ€"West broke away from, its moorings, struck the centre pier bridge, and went down the river a total wreck. The river The River las Risen Forty Feet in Twentyâ€"YFour Hours. A despatch from Winnipeg, Man., says:â€"The Big Saskatch:â€"wan river is on the rampage. The stream bhas risen 40 feet in the past 24 hours, and is still rising. The bridge piers at Edâ€" monton are under water, the ferries swept away, and hundreds of cords of wood and thousands of feet of lumâ€" ber have gone adrift. The electric light power house at Edmonton is unâ€" der water, and the flats below the town | bave been transferred into a ilake of rushing waters. i The freshet is due to the phenomenal rainfall of the past few days. TO IMPORT ENGLISH STOCK. DROUTH IN S.â€"W. RUSSIA. it feeds until the grains are " transâ€" formed into m black powder, greasy to the touch, and of the odour of decayed fish." The bulletin advises eradication of these pests by treating the seed wheat with a weak solution of sulphate of copper. TBE CARBUNCLE PLAGUE, From another bulletin issued by the Argentine Government it appears that great havoc is being wrought among the herds by a plague known as "carâ€" buncle." The virulence of this disease is such that the immediate slaughter of all aifected animals and the cremation of the carcases and the use of anticep tics in handling them are earnestly recommended. The Government underâ€" takes to supply free to stockâ€"raisers of the Republic the Pasteur lymph, which it is claimed renders animals immune from the plague. 1 "* Enormous losses," it says, "are ecxâ€" perienced every year, amounting in some instances to more than half the entire crop, caused by a disease which the {farmers commonmy call * carbon." 14 is also the cause of the productiion of the inferior grain of small value so common in, our markets, and known as smutted, punta negra, wheat." _ ‘The bulletin goes on to ascribe this " disâ€" ease,‘ as well as that of ‘carie,‘ or rot, to a microscopic fungus growth, the latter! seen in the immaiure wheat, to which it fastens itself, and on which TRIED TO KILL CONDUCTOR. The Carbuncle Plagueâ€"NHerds Upon Hords of Caitle Destroyed by lis Ravages, Which Continue Un checked. A despatch from Ottawa says :â€"Next to the United States Cangda‘s greatâ€" est rival on the hemisphere as an exâ€" porter of wheat and cattle is the Arâ€" gentine Republic. The conditions °f§ agriculture there, and particulariy ut" those of cattieâ€"raising, are popularly supposed to be such as to render the’ competition somewhat unequal. â€" But| in the South American Republic t_he‘ farmers bave troubles of their own,| and serious troubles, too. A bulletin isâ€"| sued by the Argentine Department of Agricuiture bas just been received by the department here. It is addressed to the farmers of the Republic to inâ€"| struct them in the methods of grap; pling with ‘ rot‘ and ‘ smut‘ in wheat. ; The opening paragraph of the bulleâ€" | tin, of which the following is a transâ€"|| bition, shows what serious inroads ; these pests have made upon the crops : _ SMUT IN WHEAT CAUSES INCALâ€" CULABLE DAMAGE, ARGCENTINE AGRICULTURE, SASKATCHEWAN I1LO9OD. _ _the Winter and Wheat Crops, + Peteuburg, A despatch from London, says:â€" This has been the driest summer on record here,. Only 190 tons of water per acre bas fallen instead of ‘the @sua‘ average of 610 tons. For 25 days th thermometer has remstered a tempers ture of over 80 degreac. Rainfall in 0C EmE EMUE) £20 & tho muzzle of the revolver own temple and rapidly q shots, falling dead. No m signed for his conduct, an, posed to have been insane. ud aq ;1 Y3 @6 ~~ UeXY & traln and alighted at the Loological garden, where be fired at an official, who itried to bar his entrance, He then pressed tho muzzle of the rev olver against his Dision ~Antemm ic . ange on c o O+ . HhGp A despatch from Prussia, says:â€"At 1c Credit bank here Sat a retired army capt: president ofi ihe Han fice, after presenting ment discharged a re director and clerk, da. ing both. He then in Woundcd Two Iten 4lc. f Tka: L. (a ar_ ) "CCOnOneL, Tic; May, 75¢; No. 2 Northern, 67 5â€"8e; No. 8 spring, 64 5â€"80. NMilwaukee, Aug. 18.â€"Wheatâ€"Highâ€" er; No. 1 Northern; 74; No. 2 Nortbern, 720. Ryeâ€"Higher ; No. 1, 54c. Barley Dull; No. 2, 41 1â€"2 to 42¢c; sample, 36 to Ala Enunjcctcci _2 â€" dva s . ) o ol 72 1â€"4¢c; September, 78 3â€"8c asked; Deâ€" cember, 76¢ ssked. Cornâ€"No. 2 mixed, 88 1â€"20. Oatsâ€"No. 2 mixed, 28 1â€"20, Ryeâ€"No. 2 cash, 55 1â€"2¢ bid. Clover seedâ€"Prime, cash, $2.90; October, $4.40 asked. Oilâ€"Unchanged. Duluth, Aug. 18â€"Wheatâ€"No. 1 bard, cash, 74 1â€"8¢; September, 725â€"8c; Deâ€" cember, 725â€"8c¢; No. 1 Northern, cash, 71 7â€"8s; September, 70 5â€"8¢; December, "ic: Mav. The No o ap 3! "°CCnMOD 1 white, c'aghâ€".c’l'Q _1:2cc';' 73::; September, 74c DRIEST SUMMER on RECORD to Choice bogs, per ow Light, hogs, per ewt. Cows, each. . _ Calves, each . EwWes, per cwl. Bucks, per cwt. . Spring lambs, each Buicher, Buicher, Butcher, Shippers, per lroledo, Aug. 18 I In export V:Héois;')_'the trade was fairâ€" ly brisk, with a good demand for first» class stuff. _ Butcher‘s sheep showed There was no change in export bulls, of which the quality continues poor, Cows, were unchanged, Good calves are in demand, a _ few sales being mnde as hign as $8 to $9 each for veails weighing from 175 10 200 libs. on the hoof. There was a good demand for stock. ers, prices being steady at $2.75 to $8.â€" 25 per cwt for light, and extra choice, $4. _ For heavy prices were $3.0 to $3.75 per cwt., with an extra 25¢, for best selections. RAN AMUCK _A load of shipping caltie, weight |1,200 lbs, sold for $4.60 per ewt. | _A load of mixed butchers‘ cattle, chielly cows, weight 1,0»0 livs, sold for $3.12 142 per ewi. A load of mixed butchers‘, cows and heifers, weight 1,020 lbs, sold for $3.1¢ per cwt. Fifteen heifers, weight 995 lbs, sold for $4.30 per ewt. Eight hefers, weight 1,020 ibs, sold for $4.50 per ewt, A lot of rough kows, weight 1.000 The Iight hefers, woeight 1,020 ibs, sold for $4.50 per ewt, A lot of rough kows, weight 1,000 Jbhse sold for $8.25 por ewt. Three loads of shippers, weight from 1225 to 1,8325 lbs, sold at prices rangâ€" ing from $4.45 to §5. Following are some of actions :â€" More good butchers‘ cattle are want. ed, but the general average is low. A few extra choice lots brought as high as $4.50, but the average price was around and below $4 per cwt. for which the demand is slow shippers brought as high as . CwWt. In export cattle the demand for good stuif was beyond the supply, but far. mers continu«e to send in in{erior stock, Fnas e ces utss . um P Toronto, Aug. 18.â€"There was a good run at the western cattle market to day, receipts being 82 loads. Trading was a little slow, a good deal of the stuff brought in being â€" for toâ€"morâ€" row‘s market. Hogs. e hogs, per cwt. . 475 56214 t, hogs, per cwt. . 425 475 y, hogs, per ewt. . 425 475 Prices of Grain, Cattle. Chasse in the Leading Marts. MARKETS OF THE worpp. England Palls From 610 to 198 Toxs Per Acre. 80 degrees, choice do. . med. to good . inferior. . .. 220T° OHCIE +) e P OO Miikers and Calves Sheep and Lambs. raqg _, S_" ,ney4uge or pay~ ed a revolver at a bank lerk, dangemusl,v wound~â€" then jumped into a train uk 41 Cey . . â€" Men and Pinally Blow Its Brains Out, d rapidly fired three lead. No motive is asâ€" conduct, and he is supâ€" hnnm InediccC Lrom (‘harlottanburg, ~At the branch of the e Saturday. Mr. Prien, captain and former > !{am-‘;u_rg marine ofâ€" 4* 18)â€"W!:_u t closedâ€"No. cwil. . .$ 425 $500 insane WITH a Gun â€"No. n2 Whe..t_! “7..' Cattle. ; No. 2 rérd.fca-‘d;,' ; December, 76 8 75 375 the trans a good ko LGâ€" evening iD J u been â€" he dairy . irpm ting uncer th ter barrel writing to he to tell him i leave to go ho gid not stop 1 ast this very . of her holida grace for n« was not Ros: more than on It occurred t who bad call bey shaker, 1 her as he we the idea wit ‘le had her \ barre! stand, bead over it enjoined Dan Hunt‘s, ib Ki would drop 1 Mrs. Conroy . whe saw the smoothly up mdded it to 1 g“l wideâ€"1 e thougit | churning toâ€"t éozen pounds fair. . But w recollected 1i been there to of sour sl m her in va litvle Ned t come along Ned delivered pithy | addii so in frighten lddrt‘amug i blots, and 0 l‘ulhed & w a | When she re relueved . ai scold her, an filled her bi rcross the ya seeing the p wriggied . so «snd she now goor to watd dgle of the abruptly. suddenly se mot whence. looked into up ber buy) fully ; and had indeed « hber haste s crock, and h ing of creas male by i the row pans, th BULDOAULAG+ clumsines BessiLOons after w a the awiu! dd favored her; 4 and was pres the gap in U meadows at She ran ali tj field, because ture in her af that very goors. She n.;} roy‘s Tace as cream crock i made L to face It was the fie suppos( Ehe th« to see yond a of geu way, s speed i flight. was ou real v turnin out ol hayco back â€" About @ll do borde: cocks some w OU id evenls anyinin , take her Dan‘s s whole fa Rosa: very & ing af Towards se Meanwhile dg lec Pn 4X D 1ds 1« 18

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy