West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 9 Oct 1902, p. 2

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H Collingwood report: Wu Henry Brown, for (“'ch'r gears tirrman at the Wutvrworks new. was arrested this aftvnmon l).' l‘nlul ot Police Fun] Malawi upon a charge of con- oplrncy to murder his mother. The arrest was made upon Instructions from Count: Crown Attorney Cotter, of Barrie. Tho information leading to the arrest was laid before Crown Attorney Curry. ot Toronto, by John Rose. on insurance agent. whose story was pubiislml yesterday. Briefly, it was that Brown had pro- Pooed to him to kill his mother and collect a $1,500 insurance policy on tter life In the Union Mutual Inwnnce Co. The pansy wan LI Brown'u taror and ho. had coated to my the pre- mix". but under tho non-forfeiture law of Maine it w" good until the an of December. Rose “and that I. led Brown on M n blind. with a M to saving tho old my" an, Mr. Curry. last night could not re- call. Mr. Race in hia Itatement made the extraordinary allegation that an- other Collingwood man, who» name Is at precept withheld, had asked him to become a party to the proposed murder of the farmer’s mother, in order that an innuranco of 81.500 night be collected upon her life. The no" that Roae told to Crown At- torney Curry will, if verified. prove one of the moat uensational in the annals o'. insurance frauds. SJ hor- rified was tho Crown Attorney - hearing it that, while he could take i no legal stépa himself, the alleged crime Latin-g taken place in the county of Simcoe, he at once caused copies of James statement to be for- .warded to the Attorney-General and to Crown Attorney Cotter, ot Simcoe county. The statement is unsigned, Rose after making it having con- sulted a solicitor. who advised him that by signing it ho would in reality he confessing that he had agreed to become an accomplice to the crime of attempting murder, and that before putting his signature to it heshould obtain an assurance that he would not be prtosetuttrd tor his share in the alfair. Mr. Curry would not ttive this, assurance. and Rose thereupon decided to withhold his signature. A Horrible Plan. The story that Rome tells. and Will") has been laid before the Lrown authorities. is that the subject of the conspiracy is a lady ot venerable age. wing near the town of Collingwood, I upon whose life there is a policy of l 81.51!) in the [union Mutual Life In- l nuance Company, ot this city. The , po.ky expires on Dec. 1, 1502. The son 1 of the i." ended victim some time ago I approached Rose, who is an insurance ! "iutent In Co yn‘wood. and Mind Bose ' to Join him in putting the mother out of the way and afterwards collecting Itte insurance money lie altered Rose 8500 as his share in the proceed! of , the murder. Rose, according to his f mry, kr.owiug that the insurance l policy would expire in a very short f time. and hoping to save the life of t the intended victim by appearing to t fall in with Mr son‘s horrible plans, a began to viscose the matttr with him, ' Intending to see that no harm should C come to her, . , il Counseling the Scheme. 2 The first proposition of thin unnat- 3 nral son. according to Rose's story. b was that Rose should take her out i; tor a drive near the bridge over the a Nottawasuza River, and in some way h Induce her to go down and look into , the water He could then throw her 0 in from lit-hind and assert that the in drowning was accidental. To this ' Bone says he made strenuous oblee- h tion. and the would-be matricide then t muted that some slow poison n would perhaps be a better method of f1 taking his mother‘s life. Rose again t attempted to delay matters by point- fl ing out that if he should buy poi- P am either in Toronto or Coiling- wood It would almost certainly I", be found out, and that Detroit h would be a very much safer place ii in which to attempt the murder. A number or conversations follow- 'l ed. in one ot which the son told it) Jinn: that he had decided in favor ii; M the plan of taking his mother's 3 life in the United States. and that a if Rose calied at the postotriee on rte following morning he would , ind a. letter containing some l none) tor the trip. Rose Went to , the postoltice. found the letter and l took it to a nephew of his. who . ll employed in the waterworks. 3'; The nephew opened it in Rose's t presence. and took out $10. giving al it to Rose. At a subsequent inter- . View Rose got 810 more, and came m to an ngreemcnt to start imme- diately tor the United States with i? the woman. whose death was to make im- son $1.500 richer. In- CY stead of going to Detroit, Rose 2 stopped at Toronto, and made his H “or: known to the authorities. " Mr. W. J. Pick is the manager of the l'nion Mutual Lite Insurance in Company here. and to him Rose re- a lated the above facts. Mr. Peck, a considering the case a most im- g Extent one. communicated with on P. Carry, and arranged that Mr. M Bose should relate the facts to ht him When Mr. Curry heard the case he immediately had copieu all: Rose‘s unturned statement made and com to the Att.orne.v-uencrtrl and to Crown Attorney Cotter. as above qtetett. The matter now rest. in their hands. and will no doubt be thorougmy investigated. Toronto desuatch: On Monday a nutmeg: was made before County Crown Attorney Curry by a Collin!- zoodtmn named Row, whose initials Ill- Mother Ind an Wife Alto "ttr-- What agent Bone an: to Do With lt-The Mother’s ComNaut- Prtsoneru Step-lather Wu Also Insured and Died. PRISONER TELLS MI STORY til. H. Brown Arrested for Conspiracy to Murder. (hall-pi fiilllillilhl, -"."e8l0e.", M.-.---.---" pr: Tho prisoner‘s mother wan inter- sk-wed by " reporter. she is awell- prcsorved wow“! ot about 65 years. Aho stated positively that when the insurance on her lite was taken out her son agrneJ to suppmt her, and had not given her a dollar. She aaid Uer 3000116 h‘uslnml H... "Luann-h- as so preposterous that he thought it was a joke. or that Rose was crazy. But the client, who had in- troduced the man, camr: in the next day. Rose had been talking to him. He and Mr. Bond thought that whe- ther it was a Job. or not. in the public interest the matter should be laid before a Magistrate. They sub- mitted the facts to Magistrate John Nettleton. and Chief of Police Mai.. den Investigated the matter and concluded there was nothing in it. MP. Bond'. client. who is a share- holder In the Continental Life In- surance Co.. then wrote to the To- ronto manager, and it was by him that Rose was called on to explain. He also brought the matter to the attention ot Crown Attorney Curry. Brown's Mother ‘I'ulks of "In". me to go to the station and see her off. I told him I eouldn't be- cause I had to work. I don't know whether she went or not. Last Thursday he came to me and said he had a lawyer‘s letter from the man he was dealing with in Tor.. onto, who stated if he did not get some more money he would put it in a. law.veru hands. I told him he would get no more money from me, and he went away. The pri- soner denied having made any agreement to support his mother in consideration of the policy. Rose's Grtsiiection With the Cage. Rose did not, it is said. make a voluntary statement to the Tor-t onto authorities, but it was through) .hin taikativeness here that the af- 1fair leaked out and was brought ‘to the attention of the authori- ties. Rose at one time resided here as agent tor the Union Mutual, but was until a few days ago with the Continental Lite, and resides in Toronto, coming here occasionally. Some time ago he was introduced to Mr. A. A. Bond, n young law- yer of Collingwood, by a client ot his, a prominent citizen. Rose called frequently at his office there- after. The reporter saw Mr.Boud lust high. and he Mates that on Thursday last Rose came into his office and asked him to write a letter for him, because he did not want it in his own handwriting. Mr. Bond told him he ought to use the typewriter, but as he could not operate it, Mr. Bond wrote it for him. The letter was addressed to Rose. and purported to come from a doctor in Toronto. Mr. Bond could not remember the words. but the purport of it was that if Rose did not pay over 8150 by Monday the writer would give the matter into the hands of a lawyer. It was in- timated that the writer had handled other cases like it, and there had been no kick at $1,000. It was signed "J. W. A." Rose then told Mr. Bond of what he said was Brown's scheme to get rid of his mother. Rose treated it as a great Joke. Mr. Bond pointed out to him that it was an un. dertaking that would hang him or get him lite imprisonment] But he asserted he was just trying to save the woman’s life by jollying Brown along until the policy had expired,and getting as much money out of Brown as he could in the meantime. Mr. Bond regarded the whole thing as so Drenosternna that In: tlannnhe I hadn't it with me, but would send lt to him by mail, thinking he needed some) to get through the sale of the policy I thought he was working on. I sent him the $10 and don't know whether he got it or not. I never asked him. Some time after he asked for anolhvr $10. and I borrowed that for him from Mr. Ilillburn. On Wednesday of the first week of the Exhibition he came to me and said my mother was going to Tor- onto on Tuesday, and he wanted Another time he came and asked how much I wouid take tor it. I said a. thousand dollars. He said he would see. After that he came and wanted me to lend him $10, saying he had no_t any money for expenses. I said I though It was a joke, and said. "You can do that." "Oh," he can, "wh'y don't you give her ' slug T' Four yum; ago Rose asked me to take some msurunce. I told han I had all I could carry. We got talking ’ about the rest of the family. and l l told him if it was agreeable to every- one: I would pay iur an insurance policy on my mother’s life. He went to lee net, and it was arranged. I asked her tt she had any objections, and [he on.“ she had not. Tue policy was a twenty-pay we, and 1 mud three years on Ir, $9.: a year. Then my mother sent me " lawyer s letter, slums u l did not support her she; would have the insurance trans-j ferret I naked my wi.e about it, and l she advlsed me to drop it, and I did. l Lult August nose came to me at the waterworks, and, after chatting a] whlle, he asked me how my mother was. I told him. 1 mm not seen her in fifteen months He asked me it I was keeping up her policy, and I said it had not run out yet. and that after discarding two or three plans it was agreed he should take her to Throne to In trawl] tor rheumatism, and place a - poison in her miduintr. The primer Brown denies the story. Be as)" be dealt with Rose with a View to loll- tng the policy, thinking some other company might take " over, but that at no time did he think ot bring- Attt about his mother's death. Brown tell. 'n. Story- Brown " a very short man. " year- ot age, and is distinctly of the laboring class. He is not intelligent, but Hideaway some degree o; aunt}- ueus. To a rcporter who saw him in his cell ibis evening, he at first refused to talk, referring the re- porter to his lawyer, Mr. Aliau ; but, changing his mind, he told 11.5 story in detaL, tho sunstauce of “inch was as follows: In. Hratry T. Smith, Wlnnipeg. who I'M leverely tmrnetrttiree weeks ago. by her clothing catching tire, succumbed to her injurieu.,rcster- Am- body Was taken to the Morgue, where an Inquest was opened. Laria- lette was only twenty years old and had been a. conductor for about three months. - Accident to a Montreal Street Car Conductor. Montreal despatch: Leonide Lavio.. lette, a street railway conductor, slipped white collecting fares on his open car this morning at the corner of McGitl and Lemolne streets. fell at! the front end ot the running board, and had his head cut off by the car wheels. He was instantly killed. The Mrs. Young, now Mrs. Patton,has been tor the past five years a re- sident of Chicago. but before that the greater Fart of her life, since Mr marriage in England to Young twenty years ago. was spent in Montreal. where her first hush-1nd is engaged in business. Mr, Patton is well known In Montreal. Chicago, Oct. 6. - Mrs. Mary Young, of Chicago, a member of an English family, obtained a divorce Jesterday from Charles W. Young, of Montreal, Canada, on the ground of cruelty. Less than three hours afterwards she was again mur- ried to Dr. Angus Patton, a full- blooded Indian, a graduate of the Carlisle Indian School, and chief and "medicine man" of a tribe ot Canadian "redgkins." The couple left Chicago on their honeymoon Ittst evening, a few hoursufter their marriage. They expect to make their home in thisiehty. When it looked as though Campbell was doomed, a small boat have in sight, and its occupants. noticing the man's perilous position, hastened to his aid. Tho whale then disappeared. Mrs. Mary Young. Formerly of Mttn. treat, Becomes B. me tn a Hours. our and tor a tew minutes Succeeded in keeping the Thulo_awa,r. A Cape Breton Fisherman Describe. His lucnpe From u Monster. Halifax. Ndy, Oct. 6.-Chased by a huge whale, with nothing but a pair ot ours to defend himself, is the story told by a fisherman, Fred Campbell, of Mainadieu, Capo Breton. Mr. Campbell was out in a small boat. He was not very tar from land when he noticed tt huge 90a monster ap- proaching him. Not wishing to cn- counter it, Mr. Campbell bent him- self to tho cars and tried to get in short- before the monster reached him. The whale gained on him, and he soon recognized that his efforts to reach shore ahead of his purruor were futile. His moans of defence were not of much account, but he made good use of what was at hand. Tim mon- ster owned his jnvs wide and tried to swallow the boat. man and all. Mr. Campbell r,aehed over with an Later. Mr. Neal was crowded put, an the stockholders heard of a simi- lar dream he had in HUGH, which did not pay any dividend. Experts. how- ever, have looked over the ttround, and give an opinion that there are Indications of oil in hfillerton. _ About a. year ago the Rev. Thomas Neal, of Busti. was called to Miller- ton to preach in a church where the pastor had Just resigned. While in Millerton he had a curious vision. He dreamed of a stretch of hilly land surrounded by a gloomy forest. He saw derricks rise toward the sky with engines and drills at work. Sud- denly the dream changed. the ma- chinery disappeared and oil spurtetl trom the ground. The Rev. Mr. Neal awoke next morning with the firm conviction that oil abounded in that city. He told his religious, friends about it, and then trumped around the coun- try until he located the sputthat he had seen in his vision. Then he started promoting a company to get the oil. Residents held a public meet- I Ing, subscribed tor stock. and some! took options on 1,000 acres of land where the oil, was supposed to be. 7 Compnny Bonn. for Oil on Strength oanrenln. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Oct. 6. - A corporation capitalized for 03.000. which has as its principal asset a clergyman'a dream. has begun to bore tor on near. Mlllerton. MINISTER’S QUEER VERSION. The prisoner‘s wife said the knew nothing about tho trouble untll her husband had been arrested. "She had thought the insurance had run out. Her husband, she sald, was a sober, industrious. kind man. Thor owned thoir home, a tine, large brick house on the outskirts of the town, There was a small mortgage against the property, and to help pay It off um had taken in washing. Her husband workr'd twelve hours a day every day in the week. one month trom mom: to midnight, and the next trom midnight to noon, and his wages wore $1.85 a day. They liad two little girls. THE HUUE WHALE STORY. Mrs. Levy, on Edward street, and utter a week returned home withbut gaging Rose. MANS HEAD CUT OFF. WOMAN WEDS INDIAN. I M'WA! HE MXXCEEDED. Prof. De Bam Bum-nu no one; I can't ts ter _r_nusig._ AShe 35m; the scale! to suit herself. used to be in the lee business. Ai/r' 1eyijr-.ifdir, ice Tiari G if]; “from. her father; he Th. T “was? TORONTO boon alter retiring to their room tho railroad representatives left the “bite House. “my retmred to say anything except that they were com- ing back at 3 ohlock for a further conference. President Baer we. asked by a number of newspaper men where he could be new, and he re- new in a room on the lower floor of tin “lute House. The general nup- posnmn was that they either had rccehed a. proposition. and "hauire- tired to Comider it, or had retired to prepare one ot their own. I do not Invite a, discussion of your respective claimu and positions. I appeal to your patriotism, to the spirit that sinks personal consider- ation. and makes individual Inert “can tor the general good. Rallwu' Mon Meet. At 11.25 o'cloelr, whrn the confer- ence over the coal strike situation had men In progress but. IG minutes, the railrwuj representatives left rlto bonference room and were clou- or upon any minim relation that I bear to the situation; but the urgency and tho terrible nature of the catastrophe impending over a large portion of our [tropic in the shape of a winter “mine compel me, after much Maxims thought, to be- lieve that m, duty requires me to use whatever Lu.lurucr, I personally (an to bring to an end a situation which has betriau- literally intoler- nbie. Iwish to tmphasize the char- acter ot the situation and to say that its gravity is well that I am constrained urgently to insist that each one of you take every burden of responsibility upon him. We are upon the threshold oi winter at an already existing coal famine, the future terrors of which we can hardly yet apprctiate. The evil pos- sibilities are so tar-rtraehing, so appalling. that it seems to me that you are not only Justi- fied in singling. hat rritairedr to dink for t e time being any ten-, unity as to your respective claimsw in the matter of inane between you. in my Judgment the situation im. peratively requires that you meet upon the common plane ot the no cessily of the rublic whose welfare we whim] earnestly dsire. I ask that there be an immediate resumption of operations in the coal mines in some such way as will without a day‘s unnecessary delay meet the crying needs ot the people. era; but the situation Itself vitally affects the pxblic. As long as there seemed to be a reasonable hope that these matters could be adjusted be- twoen the pix-lies. " did not seem proper to me to intervene in any way. Idizclalm any right or duty to intervene this “any up'm legal grounds Ttte Preoldenl'l Andi-cu to the Con- fence. The following statement ot the re- marks or President Roosevelt ut the opening of the conference was given out: " wish to call your atten- tion to the tact that there are three 't1rties ufhctm by the situation in the anthracite trade: The opera- tors, the miners, and the general public. 1 weak for neither the oper- atoru nor the miners bat for the general public. The questions at issue which led to the situation af- fect immediately the parties con- cerned, the operators an! the min- Washington, Oct. 3.--The second stop in the President's efforts tout- tect a settlement between the un- thruclte coal magnatce and the miners was taken to-day. At 11.10 o'cltck every person who had been imltnd to partlt‘lpate, except Presl- dcnt Oliplmnt, ot the Delaware & Huh-on Road, who amt as his por- ‘wonal rvpresentative Build Wilcox, ivictsPresiuent and General Counsel of that road, and President Cassatt. of tho PtsrttusJlvurr.a Road, was present in the room of the temporary execu- tive nwualou, when: Pre ilent Roost»; VN', since his return trom Indianap- olis, has transactoi such ntcessary public buninrss as could not be post- poni-d. The President, dunng the 'wuCr'rettce, was seated in a large invalid chair. his leg resting; upon a cusls'on. The l'ruldcut most cor- dially greeted each of his guests as be appeared. THE trr6T'hiih'rr GIVEN our. Text ot Statement 1tead---Uoa" and Railway Men All "egtreaented--. Expect to Meet Agnln This After- '"ron-ou, be Propositional of Bettirment. PUBLIC MUST HAVE FUEL. Roosevelt Reads the Riot Act to Visitors. WHITE liillllili BUM (lllllll%lll1 l, l., cgm't _t_ea.ch your daugh- Sullivan. Ind., Oct. 6.41.“ Ar- thue, a. night watchman. wu seized by white happen at 1 o‘clock this morning while making " round- at the Gilmore mines. near here. tied to a tree and leverely whipped with union twitches. The white cuppa-e moaned Arthur ot ulna-1n; " wile. Thinner“ u denied by mend. ot Jamel Arthur The Io Tree and Lull- ed Sovercly. an hour. The soutiiiiCiu"iGiG.' accordingly acquitted. The particulars of the affair " witneued by when" was detail- od to the Jury. The defence was that the shooting was accident“. the lad, not knowing tho re. voh er was toevird. The jury return- ed a vex-(Met ot "not gullty.’ alter de'itMrrsttrus for three-quiirtem, of an hour. The youthful pllasonor was mom ot the school at l o'clock. Baal-Ice no!land. a classmate. Hiyfully knocked off his hat. The boy. drawing a revolver from his pocket, that the you“: girl through the forehead. death xesult'ng with.. a half an hour. Young Sharpe fist the lad not knowing the rm volver, whmh was found the next day by P0130 Detective Aiken. - ___ v». ‘. -nrl - -1." last Eric Sharpe. a pupil in the Jan or fourth class of Frontenac Public SchoJI, in roznp'Lny with sev- eral cognmdee. _waa in the cloak- Bey Who Shot mm. (Bill Kot Guilty at nlnnsl‘u‘hut. Kingston, Out., despatch: At this afternoon's gutting or the High Court the hearing ot the Sharpe manslaughter case was begun. the grand jury [mung returnu! a true Moose Jaw. N., W. T., Oct. 1. - Ralph, the eldest son of A. H. Ball. the pnncipul or the school here.ate the contents of a box of neuralgia tublots under the impression that tinny were candies. He died shortly arterwarrhe. Winnipeg, Mam. Oct. 6.-Frederiee Robertson, aged 67, and a barber by trade. fell dead last night. He was npparenfiy In good health un- tilthe moment of his death. Child Kat. Neutrals“ Tablet: and Dies. Winnipeg, Mam. Oct. 6.-Frederiuk In!” Absent I'llemoelvn From See- l “one of the Home of Commons. London, Oct. lk-The object of the meeting of the hatiottalis" mem- bers of Parliament summoned try John Redmond. chairman of tho Irish Parliamraitarv party. for Oct. Tth, the Pall Mall Gazette says. is con- rideruthu ot tho desirability of entire abstention from the autumn session of Parliament, whereby the Irish numbers win escape the odium of supporting tho "C'oertionitA" Gov- nrivnr-nt in pus-Mug the 'xNcation bill. Inasmuch as the Catholics heartily favor the hill. tho proposal is likely to lead to a lbw-Ir: debate. The Pall Mall Gawtte further think that the proposed abstention is partially duo to tho fact that owing to the absence of Mess". Red- mond and Dillon in America, Where; they win attend the national tron-, vention of the United Irish [mane at l Boston. on on. 10th. the work or] On tn? afternoon ot April 38th The German press is emphasizing the status of the Boers a. British subjects, and dtclurts that there is no reason why British sentiment should feel hurt by the Kaiser grant- ing an audience to the Boer generals. Judging trom the tone of the Impeer organs. however, it is likvly that the Emperor will find " way to decline to rocch‘e than. ' WHITE CAP OUTRAGE. Wm Only Grant Then Audience on Condition» Berlin. Oct. 6.-The correspondent learns from the beet authority that General! Botha. Delnrey and DeWet. the Boer leaders. applied to the GOT- ernment to ascermm the possibility of their being given an audlence by Emperor William. They were Inform- ed that an audience would be ground conditionally. The genera" accepted the conditions, and the Government is now waiting to see it the condi- tions are fulfilled. It is not doubted that one of the conditions is that England tacitly consents to the audi- ence. out! n 16 almost certain that this hag been dip'mttutictslls obtained. ERIC SHARPE GOES FREE KAISER AND BOER GENERALS Later.-imudent Roosevelt's at- tempt to settle the coal strike was a complete failure. Secretary Root, after a private talk with the President. expressed the opinion that the prom" were bright for same satislmtory outcome to the negotiations instituted to-day. I When the President had concluded the reading of his autement he aid that he did not expect that when party would be ready to subunit pro- position- at the time. but he med them to take into ooneiderntion what he had aid and to return at three o‘clock. He aid that he hoped some {reposition might be prueated at that time which would furnid: the basin of an ndjuntment. The first conference then broke up. It had lasted lean than " minuten. The representative" of the railroads went to their carriages They re- fused to any anything except that they would meet again at 30'clock. Keen": Moped for. It was undorstood'that each party to the conference would formulate some proposition during the interim. based on what the President had said. or that mush would be prepared with a reply to present to the Presi- ( dent when the conierence was re-l Filmed at 3 o'clm‘k. . nuclei! WV“ Al... Pro-indent Kitchen tett tth White goo-e noon alter the flil'lx Prol enta. WWW. N.-.-"'"' w- _.v -7- --v to get - when we can ttutrter and where you cannot use In.” ' THE IRISH MEMBERS. BARBER FALLS DEAD. To loot at 8 o'Clock. we on frrinq 1 Anagnrika H. Dhnrmupia. Bud!- hist representative in Amerivn. bu Just arrived in Log Angvles frmn Ceylon. on route to London, Ilpprtr tosus against drmralh-n In} Hr!"- Ish omeiau ot ”admin shrirws in Ceylon. Besides U. & Ambassador To'm'r' IPIIOID-UIGI'I! to Human); the ful- lowing are announomi: R. R. Mc- Cormick to Russia: Bellamy Morn to f.uttru-mutzar.v: A. S Hardy to Stunt; C. P. Bryan to Switzer- land', B. F. “Io-pron. to Bruit. Meagrt Bunou, a bonnie:- nt 148 Beret in“. Montreal, discharge! two - Ihotl Into his tare, pruni- can: tearing him taco into an un. mble name. He did not SI!) can In Hum; Mute". bot his deettt Is mid-rod only a utter " n is repxtcd in nautical rim-Ir! that Hon. H. t Batty, Truwur-rr of the Prostttms of Quebec, will shortly be appointed to a judgedlip, and that Hon. J. C. Md‘orkhhl, now u brainw- tive Couuciiior, will wowed Mr. Duffy. Onion: have been issued tor a To- ronto (gm-neon church parade on Sunday. Oet. 12. Gnome F. Parmenter. fireman and Engitcer Waist-wood. were killed:- a collision at Greenfield, Mom. The atriko of Chicago coal lint; stars, that for a limb threatened ccprite U10 pvAr.i: school: of their fuel cuppiy. has been settled. The latest undertaking of the Hiram Walker & Son- Co. is boring foroit on tho “land at Trimdud. 50 the West Indies. Minnie Broucknmn. the rour-yrar oid daughter ot Honry Broutamea. was run down and killed by an aut- Omobllo driven by Vernon inward. a (menu Board ot Trade brat-m Judge Carter, of Chicago. denies cer- tlneat.s ot ritizcnship to Japanese. The story of a Danube steamer sinking with " persons was untrur. Ottawa, hat placed an order tor 5.000 tone ot coal in Wales. " ho! hum deridediiit the funeral of M. am shall take place on Sunday lingual! of Friday, as originally plan- French Cabinet Negative. Propoul to Honor Dead Hun-“u. Paris,Ort.6-The undue! met to- day and durum“! the question of I national TUINTJI [or the late M Lois and the internal-n! at the body tn the Pantheon. Both propmitlous were decided it: the negative. M. ('lmumle. Mlulater of Public Instruction. will reg-aunt the Government at the funeral, and will may" a speech In liquor of the late author. Niagara Fans. N. Y. has a m”- pox can. WQIMngton hop crop is 2,000 balm short of last year; In Boston hard coal is $15 and not! coal 8850. The crop to pretty well ditrtributrd. Sntwactory reports are to build from alum-t every net-lion. and tho dealers any that it now loch as if three times as many apples will he packed this your u were tmrrelH-8 hut Fear. The mire. however. is not no high. ranging from Mt cents to a. dollar a barrel to the farmer, or- eordlng to quality and kind. Thu dealer! who bought by the orehnrt have no reason to complain. no the crop exceeds the. early estimate. On the other hand. those who are buy- ing by the barrel have no culls to handle and no rid to run from haw, winds. Dealer- 8-1 the Realm are Exceed. In; the Ital-“e. Toronto apple buyers up that it: crop throughout the Province 1. turning out much better than it pro- mtced earlier in the moon. Not only to It larger, but the quality or Hm fruit has Improvou. the fungus no- ticeable in the early autumn has pretty generally disappeared. and the apple- In": filled out weil, witn- out oeriouu btetnirh. APPLE CROP HAS MPROVED. Mr. John Irwltris nppointed train- master ot the 22nd, 23rd aml L'4ttt dlnricts: otnee, Btrattord, Ont" About eight months ago the num- ber of trninmasters on this, alumna was reduced by one, but the an”- iment was not deemed a success, and the old order ot things Is now restored. Mr. P. J. Lynch. tralnmasu-r, “I; have.chu-ge ot the 15tis mph“ 16th district. between Hamihm and Port Dover. 20th district. be tween Bunnie and Goderich. um P.1.t district; t)ttree, Suratford. 0m The [allowing changes and up. point-seats are effective this mug; Mr. w. E. (butane. Assist“: 9w. perlntendent. will hare charge ..r matters pertaining to transporta. tion and stations on 16th distr,rt, between Toronto and Hamilum. 17th. 18th and 19th districts and 20th district, between Harrisburg and Tilsonburg Junction. Circular lulu by Capt. Jones A.. Don-m Bone Chung". superintendent Jones. of 1m. Grand Trunk. has Issued the rm. Ir, mg cirpqlnr. dated yesterday GRAND TRUNK APPOINTMENTS mi Gioverh hair was man man but burned tron her head, I.” we hm" were destroyed and hrr may and hands Miy burned llvr oymmh‘t “gone. 3nd the unending "urgsota (he no encouragemr'nt as to its “m toratiott. ' It in supposod that the wnIte paper contained a [lactayp m gunpowder. I... “but that. u Pack... 0, W40: Into the lune. ”hour. N. M., Oct. Ik As 1.. m-tt of so explosion at gunpowde, In. Jude Glover. the young wife ot Harry Glover. no. at her ttume in a ween-bu condition. She is a bum ut ”than three months. At the time at tho wade-t also was Packing up the hon-chow enact- preparatory to and“ to ”other bouoc. Nae tlirew I bunch of wane paper into um “owe. and gluon lulumly there “u s tan-me explosion. the new bung ton to pieces and the (mute "Mn filled with fire to such an cxtern that the [our wallet and (“lung prvsen: ho, thing but a. Maryann] nurtucv N0 NATIONAL FUNERAL. BRIDE LOST HER HAIR. no q which not in u hue-d demeu 'our m the man bud. am to spun: your mu father's tor he'll "an an child (m oh, add das giving a head ulol hm dun] an. timl: tend: he left 1 .mllln t there In I great down " Md 1 about "Ah, said. hm from hm I them out any pom to I enough ( nwkwnn Ital-Um: [term] I sooner 1 t wry I hoard ha into ail: round. 1 "Vullen little I Bho- rom unified relax-no (net. I health. do no. we - and wll um! um perienm The S .LHI‘ BO) l: "Y mm: Ham"~ 1' tho oul 'tonto" headset cud thr (Home If dunno” If? UMP1 clue " follow. roads 1 Mich"! rod bloc but um“ N in t Ugere in world " Pills 71 (rum teri health cine. an are an” H they Pink P gaunt}. . Vftttt Mes tha went I!“ t-dicitw Itettte a by add?! Mot Ion The“ "Dunn- uul my ll In") of tho wilfully, think l (roan w ot appel natural girlhood A term: lad hi t more ., ll. trail " kn 'Good - I will ! all“ Mun no I the wat live won Pro m mil I" 'O

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