West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 30 Jul 1896, p. 8

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)f cultivation free from | Spring Creek. Stone H. W ood Shed attached. B Stone Basement Stal ement House 30560, 8! meath. Root House 10 ft Water. Churehes enient. . 44 miles from J d, oneâ€"third down. Rare Bargain. Sto« iness meant. If »0# _ a term of yeartt It will handle all ~ou no trouble Fot ‘ye you prices and t five Pngg:es and some Cart® d at prices that will surpri6@® Dargain at your own terms. reliable Co. â€" Call on us and ing a long waisted pair call and get e you. SUMâ€" sireable art Come and CHINERY crin the world go to r Town, DPurham, ity. poer Town Durham. IE T0 US. COME 10 ¢ N a cRANT 34 & Nes proporty. Marringo Lisens®® RGAXS, SIOVES HU R, d Fresh i2 all lines TRIED ted 6 hook EASON. «t 75 CLOTHING Con. Normanby, cont® _ MO cleared. A L mil tod Adams‘ Waggou. Ios of will make a liberal reduction Harvest is pecial Bar. zeek in are sold very cheap, SHOES l1 kinds. i Copairs for all kinds of ind buy our machines and FOR SALE. > hav e NAP ! 1 § " over half the W ATSON, Jr., AD. Agents, ThE VERY LATEST FROM AL«. wORLD OVER. Interesting Items Great Britain All Parts of di ports Val. Shortis, derer, has Leen itentiary. Lord A‘fifdfi- 1CB ed Adju militia. the W tember W The Allans Government ind i IHD th th Tard an nie . Jowne through th and killed. Mrs. Wi LHOOT EW7 The wheat crop of Manitoba is varâ€" usly estimated at from 12,000,000 to ),000,000 bushels. The Allans are to consult with the overnment regarding the fast Atâ€" intic service. Mrs. Adam W. Pearson dropped dead : Winnipeg on Thursday while dressâ€" 1g her children. An Italian peanut vendor is under rrest at Niagara Falls for an attempt o assault a little girl. Rev. C. H. Shutt, of St. Catharines, ; suing certain members of his church or alleged libel and slander. At Hamilton David Kinner was comâ€" nitted to penitentiary for three years or stealing two kegs of lager. A big gold strike is reported in the "ity of Spokane claim on Monte Cristo Mountain, British Columbia. Hamilton Street _ Railway Company will be asked to issue two sets of tickets it nine and seven for a quarter. Chief Aitchison of the Hamilton lire brigade has returned home from t‘he firemen‘s tournament in London. The militia camps may not be held this summer, but if that be impossible they will be held early next summer. _Aunie Hawkins, daughter ofa Dowâ€" nie Tow mhig farmer was dragged throuzh the field by a runaway horse at Sarnia. ‘The three Port Credit men who as smulted the crew of the Hamilton yacht Hiawatha have apologized and paid the damages, about goaoo Principal Ireland of the Hamilton Art School has received the bronze medal and diplorma won by the school at the World‘s Fair three years ago. The illness of Lady Tupper in Lonâ€" don is not as serious as at first reportâ€" ed, and Sir Charles has in consequence cancelled his proposed trip to England. The steamer Tormore, from Cardiff, for Halifax, N. 8., is reported ashore at Trepassey, Nfld. Her cargo _ was coal for the imperial dockyard at Haliâ€" resting Items About Our Own Country Great Britain, the United States, and All Parts of the Globe, Condensed and Assorted for Easy Reawling. CANADA. __» and TLady Aberdeen are at Queâ€" Sir Donald Smith, the Canadian High‘ Commissioner in London, has been inâ€" vested at Windsor castle as Knight Commander of the Order of St. Michaet and St. George. The Victoria sealing achoonora sug- posed to have been wrecked o the northâ€"cast coast of Ja{mn by the recent ilal wave, is reported at Victoria, i.C., to be safe. George Clendenning of Montreal, is under arrest at Chicago charged with De O EOWmm im s ns uce â€"% adjust with the United States Canâ€" aclan Bering sealers‘ claims for seizâ€" ures. Negotiations _ have been completed whereby the Michigan Central Railâ€" way have the use of the London & Port Stanley line until the expiry of the Walker lease, which has eighteen years to ruun. The Wabash express ran into a local freight train at 'l'fxamesville on Friday mommi. Both trains were badly damâ€" aged. Engineer Booth, of the express, was Instantly killed, but the passengers escaped unburt. ;'n.f t\Wnl«-en will probably . open Western Fair at f.ondon on &ep- wing one of the " long and short . hiecves who have been conducting darâ€" ng operations in that city. Justice King of the Supreme Court f Canada has been appointed British epresentative upon the cglpmisslog to Exâ€"Governor William Russell, of Masâ€" sachusetts, who was camping out _ with some friends near St. Adelaide de Palos, Que., was found dead in his tent on Thursday morning. He died ot heart disease during the night. A magnificent yield of fruit is reâ€" rted in Huron and Perth. The bay E)poor, but the advice of the Ontario Agricultural Department to the farmâ€" ers to sow corn as a substitute in times of drouth has proved of great benefit. ons & October 8 next will be the fiftieth anniversary _ of the marriage of Sir Charles and Lady Tupper, and it is their intention to commemorate the event by a golden wedding. The event will be celgbrated probably in Montreal. Lord Ssliab‘ulg, in the House of Lords on Friday, said that the negotiations with the United States on the question of the Venezuelan claim, were prooeet‘i: Of [HC VY OnEAUARMMAE MEAAA qOLRLL ing satisfactorily. On the larger subâ€" ject of general arbitration, he was proâ€" reeding with great caution. An Act to consolidate the Acts reâ€" specting the solemnization of marriage becomes law on August 1st. There aro some new clauses in this Act, one of which is that rettuinnz the making of affidavits by both contracting plll'?:-_ CEAAA T NCE N7 EMUZUIP PTONOCCCCOIE T Heretofore the groom was the only per= son necessary to the legal issuance fi wR HOQeaeih J CE COme 1B T CC es o a license, but after August 1st the affidavit of the bride must be taken and presented with that of the groom }:fore a license or certificate can be sued. At the National Rifle Association meeting at Bisley, Eng., on Friday, the Canadian team won the Kolagro cup â€"one of the great prizes of the meet. The Canadians had to compete with trade returns for June sB falling off in exports and teams from the Mother Co: and Guernsey and Jersey! In m to the cup, the Canu{xuu_ win m pounds in money, given to the a! team making the highest score. The highest score. The victory was a popuâ€" lar one, and the Canadians were heartâ€" Uly cheeretu. vorable. rmy worm has .pm in the of Guvlph. aimes Brown, Y. S of Guelph, mm antbhrax poisoning. ; a hundred new houses are in f erection in London, P:rron has been temporarily ate Nr. la . Doro William Siblington, & blind elâ€" woman accidentally set fire to othes, and was burned to death, Barron i crop reports eould not !. Aylmer bhas been appointâ€" ntâ€"General of the Canadian tis, the Valle{tjeld murâ€" en seriously ill in the penâ€" Lady ll'lr;‘{;.i;)e;;"gf Hamilton. | John Weir, farmer, of *‘ left an estate of over | a MIHL the Mother Coflf%md . Jersex.' In addit to Canadians win eighty NHRLIZEL L JGRVELRLRLY. Prof. Hu{{’y Drummond is dying at Tunbridge Wells, Eng. The present session of the British Patrlifi?:nt will come to a close on Augâ€" us A The sale of the estate of the late Lord Leighton realized one hundred thousand pounds. In Paris the heat is so great that it has been found necessary toclose many of the workshops. Intensely hot weather is reported in the south 8:“ of the British Isles, France and Germany. The Duke and Duchess of Connaught will make a tour of Sligo, Galway, and Connemara in the autumn. Sir John Evans bas accepted the Presidency of the British Association, which meets in Toronto next year. A (g:l;mting by Alma Tadema and one by stable were stolen from a van in London last week while being taken to Paddington. During their visit in London a pub= lisher presented the Boston_ Artillery with one hundred copies of Cromwell‘s Soldiers‘ Bible. _The new Nvacht 14 It for Eugene Higâ€" gins, the New York millionaire, at & cost of $500,000, was launched in the Clyde on Wednesday. The British House of Commons will not have time this session to deal with the Deceased Wife‘s Sister‘s bill, which recently passed the House of Lords. In response to an appeal in the Lonâ€" don Chronicle, the Princess Maud has promised not to give her sanction to %;\;elty by wearing osprey plumes in her At a representative gathering. . Of Irishmen in Ottawa on Monday night delegates were appointed to attend the Irish convention in Dublin in Sepâ€" tember. » From femarks made on Wednesday evening by Sir Michael Hicksâ€"Beach, it is inferred that the Venezuelan difâ€" ficulty, as far as the United States is concerned, is practically settled. The Miners‘ Conciliation Board,which was launched under Lord _ Rosebery‘s auspices, bas proved a failure, and & long strike is now impending. between British mineâ€"owners and their men. The withdrawal of the amendments t? the Irish land bill offered by Mr. Gerald Balfour, Chief Secretary for Ireland, is being sharply criticized by friends of the Government and has caused much rejoicing among the Opâ€" position. Tke monument which has been erectâ€" ed in St. Mary‘s church, Aldermanâ€" bury, London, to John Heminge and Henry Condell, who collected and first published Shapespeare‘s writings after the death of the famous Fg;gh.sh draâ€" matist, was unveiled on Tuesday afterâ€" noon An American named Korner, of Bufâ€" falo, divorced from his wife, locked his son, a lad of sixteen, up in his room in a London hotel on Thursday, and went out. On his return the goy was gone, and it is supposed he was kidâ€" napped _ by his _mc_nhgr a‘nd m:nt. 2CE ECCC PW U NT Feapd Ahtw s dn Lo Young Korner is heir to a large forâ€" According to the compilers of the new city directory, the population of Bufâ€" falo is now 360,000. A full wheat crop is not exfifcted in anvy part of the State of Minne in any part of the State of Minneâ€" sota, owing to drought. Cheyenne, WIv:o., had a cloudburst on Thursday. Five inches 0f rain fell in an hour and 40 minutes. A wild man, who goes on all fours, is reported to be roaming about Bristle Ridge, near Crawfordsville, Ind. _ Mrs. Mar{ Harlan, mother of Senator Harlan, of lona, is dead at Indianapolis, aged 100 yearsrand five months. A despatch from Madrid says that the relations between Spain and the United States are now on a satisfacâ€" tory footing. Mrs. Margaret Smith, of 351 Market street, Patterson, N. J., has found her brother, Robert Blackwood, after 40 years‘ search, according to report. The Detroit railway is reported to have been sold to R.T. Watson, of New York, who with Thomas T. Johnson, owns the Citizens‘ Street Railway. Chicago expects to have a tower which will be the highest structure of the kind ever erected. It will be fifâ€" teen hundred feet high and three hunâ€" dred feet square at the base. The several_ cantons of Patriarchs Militant from Canada who intend visitâ€" ing Buffalo have received permission to carry the Union Jack with the Stars and Stripes in the procession. Prof. W. W. McEwen, of Jackson, Mich., is constructing _ & sixtyâ€"foot rocket which is to carry him two miles into the air in fewer seconds than any man hbas ever travelled that distance on earth or through the atmosphere. Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt, sr., is sufâ€" fering from : a slight attack of paralyâ€" sis, induced by worry over his son‘s inâ€" tended marriage with Miss Wilson against his father‘s wishes. The report of the Navigation Bureau shows that dunnsoiho%zear ending J une 30, 709 vessels of 204,000 gross tons were built in the United States, as comparâ€" ed with 682 for last year. d GREAT BRITAIN UNITED STATES ns i x OAE in wl 22â€" ies i0 00 0e erfioaah the ‘ f pumommecmmamemmmmmmmmemes es Din d at Tromsoe, | _ Relief in Six _ Hours.â€" Distre_uinfi one, i 'nnqn for his| Kidney and Bladder Diseases relieve contro by balloon. _ | in six hours by the "South American | smoke have been disâ€" Kidney Cure." This new remedy is & r:gne cause they reâ€" g{eat surprise and delight on account is not ige which was its exceeding promptness in relievâ€" ity ha ious scoundrel.| :DE pain in the bladder, kidneys, back | gnvar nzibar bhas deâ€" and every part of the urinary passages , Grand zal status . of in male or feamle. It 1ielieves rqtel_\-‘ zibar, out â€" of tion of water and gam in passing it | . inion almost immodhtzl‘y. t you want quick | Em opinion. Burct and cure this is your remedy.| & YiC! of to the Khalifa at Omdurman that his army had been defeat@ed at Firket GRUWNS THAT A.BE SH.AKYI ;gag immediately put to death by cruciâ€" | ixion. ic The insurgents at Apokorona killed BECAUSE OF DREAD OF THE ASSASâ€" the crew of a Turkish bark. _ Troops | SIN‘S KNIFE. pursued the insurgents and fired upâ€" | on every body they met, killing many | was« women and children. | Frightful Kecord of the World‘s Regicides A despatch from the Island of Crete says that the Turkish authoritiee are gradually extending the military zone, and occupying new positions daily. Many excesses are being committed by the Turks. Mr. Cecil Rhodes and Mr. Alfced Belt, directors of the South Africa Company, who were implicated in the Jameson raid, have refunded to the company all the sums drawn by the Johannesberg Reformers. News has reached Buluwayo that the | rebels have occupied a position on the ; Tati road about twent{-five miles south of Buluwayo, and that they are ‘ erecting fortifications. Serious fightâ€" | ing is expected shortly. | Complete returns for the election of | members of the Belgian Chamber of | Deputies show that there were 105| Clericals, 18 Liberals, and 29 Socialists | chosen.. This gives the Clericals in the Chamber a majority of 18 votes. | A special from Havana says that a panic prevails in the Spanish army in consequence of the terrible increase of }'ellow fever during the last few days. t is estimated that fullfr forty per cent. of the cases prove fatal. The steamer Hope with the Pearg. expedition on board, left Siv;dney. N.S., at noon, for Greenland. The main obâ€" ject of the expedition is Lt.obe"ing ba:clj a fortyâ€"ton meteorlite which is located at Cape York. A gqmlgerflgf scientists FIGHT WITA SMUCCLERS, are accompanying Lieut. Peary. Mow His Team of Horses Were Driven Over the Precipice and Dashed to Death on the Rocks Belowâ€"The YVessel Is Seized and Towed to Sydney. The Controller of Customs had to deal with an important whisky seizure case on Wednesday, based on a report made to the department at Ottawa by Chief Preventive Officer J. Phoren of Sydney, C. B., one of the coolest heads in the service. On Wednesday, July 8, Phoren grew sguspicious of _ the movements of a small schooner hovering off Low Point, at the eastern entrance to the Sydney roadstead. In the evening he crossed the bharbor, and hiring a team, drove to the nearest landing place east from lthe Point, timing his trip so as to arâ€" rive on the scene after dusk. It is one of the most lonely and bleakest spots on the eastern coast, and there sure enough was the schoonâ€" er at anchor just off the beach, with every indication on board that the smugglers were at work in the vicinity landing her contraband cargo. Offâ€"i;st?f”horen and his assistant left their rig and made for the beach, but they had a desperate gang to deal with. From an ambuscade near by the smugglers poured volleys of stones upon the officers, and Phoren fell in the first round, unconscious from a terâ€" rific wound on the foreheadj He was dragged to a farmhouse by the officer, rallied in half an bhour and at once telegraphed to North Sydney for asâ€" sistance. But by the time the steamâ€" er arrived the smugglers had landed all the cargo except two small kegs, ‘(‘)f rum, and stowed it safely away. Lhe schooner was seized and taken in tow to North Sydney where BPP lwe.‘. 7 team and hfi were discoveren. L107 smug%lers driven the horses over a clilf at the seaside so that they were dashed to death on the rocks below. The wagon they dumped into the lake. Such was the report of the incident made to the department, acting upon which Hon. Mr. Patecson toâ€"day issued orders to have criminal proceedings inâ€" stituted at once against several men near Low Point who are suspected of being members of the smuggler, crew. The schooner will be sold, but will not fetch much at auction, being an old craft, which the contrabandists proâ€" bably bouggt for the purpose, caring little if they lost her so long as they landed ber cfar%o safely. It is evident from this case that smugâ€" f’lileng from the French island of St. rre to the coast of Cape Breton has not ceased to be a paying though still a hazardous enterprise. The preâ€" ventive service along the coast is far more effective than it was 20 years ago, when smuggling whisky and tobacco was quite an industry â€" among the coasters. But, with all the watchfulâ€" ness of its officers, the customs of Canâ€" ada is doubtless cheated out of thouâ€" sands of dollars ye‘ar‘ly l‘n loss of‘.re- meqEpNEEs OML AEZMMACUC OS CCAE DcaD c venue through wholesale smuggling from the adjacent French possession on the shores of Newfoundland. Piles Cured in 3 to 6 Nights.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Ointment will cure all cases of Itching Piles in from 3 to 6 nights. One application brings comfort. For Blind and Bleedinial’iles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, Salt Rheum, Eczema, Barber‘s Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 85 ctz. OFFICER KNOCKED SENSELESS BY CONTRABANDISTS. â€" FFCUCEICAE, Som »MH CA N T t3 baby stand alone." ‘"Why, she‘s old enough to learn to walk." "Old enough to learn to walk! Why, she hasn‘t even learned to ride a bicycle yet." Rheumatism Cured in a Dag'.â€" South American Rheumatic Cure for Rheuâ€" matism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkabie and mysterious. Tt removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greativ benefits. 75 cents. Spencerâ€"*"They told me at your ofâ€" fice that you nvers only one of the clerks. And you said you were a diâ€" rector." Fergusonâ€"‘"So I am. I adâ€" dress envelopes." iisease 1mimnc&mily UOrkEL‘ esinat d o1 71218 01 PB .. 20. o Adhann/ uies hn irst dose zreativ benefits. 75 cents. . times subject to the most violent atâ€" tacks of frenzy. At other times he is k on hn oo @s docile as a lamb. Sometimes he imâ€" _Spencerâ€"‘"They told me at your Of= agimes himself to be a stork. Under tice that you Awvers only one of the guch conditions he will stand for hours clerké. And you said you were a diâ€" in the water on one foot. rector." Fergusonâ€""So I am. I adâ€" There are no doors in the palace dress envelopes." | where he lives. A closed door convulsâ€" pumommecmmammmmemmmemmmem es him with fury. He is, gt)on seeing Relief in Six_ Hours.â€" Distre_asi% one, immediately seized with an unâ€" Kidney and Bladder Diseases reliev controllable desire to demolish it. He in siz bours by the ‘"South American smokes incessantly, and drinks chamâ€" Kiduney Cure." This new remedy is & Egne in huge quantities. At times he t surprise and delight on account not above the level of a beast. Insanâ€" g its exceeding gr‘gmptueu in relievâ€" ity has blighted the lives of many ro{ul ing pain in the b der, kidneys, back | g.vsrhns. The elder brother of the and every part of the urinary passages rand Duke died a hopeless lunatic. in male o c ctag is it ma r;;fl:;\ ROYAL ASSASSINS. tion wa an passi it immstin taul io eate onl |s moie s ranencier d tyocpee, poe i is vour re % 1 relief and cure â€"frightful. The brother of the late Emâ€" "Frederick," said she, "don‘t let the Frighiful Kecord of the World‘s Regicides â€"Russia‘s New Czar in Constant Fear of His Lifeâ€"Queen Victoria is Carefully Cuarded. The recent dastardly attempt of n{ member of the terrible Babi Society to assassinate the Shah of Persia vividly illustrates the dangers which constantâ€" ly menace the lives of the rulers of the old world. "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown." What potentate enâ€" joys perfect immunity from the possiâ€" bility of being murdered in cold blood? None. Above all others, the Czar of Russia is admittedly in greatest peril of being slain. The most extraordinâ€" ary precautions are taken to guard his life. Queen Victoria is carefully guarded, | I\ and for good reason. No less than nine ta] or ten attempts upon her life have. a been made, usually by insane persons. | 4 In her old age the Queen is extremely | _ apprehensive lest the vigilance of her | ; guards should grow lax and she become | a the victim of some evilâ€"hearted assassâ€" in. She doesn‘t go out as frequently as of yore, but when she does she is alâ€" '] ways surrounded by men whose sole duty it is to guard her. * & } GUARDING CROWNED HEADS. 5 The Kings and other members of ! royalty who have been foully murdered are many. M. Sadi Carnot‘s death oc~|| | eurred two years ago, but it is still | | vivid in the world‘s mind. The *"sombre ‘shadow of death" hangs, indeed, Ov@T | : the history of France. Since the incepâ€" || tion of the present century no less than four of its rulers have died in exile. \ Who will forget the melancholy terâ€" | mination of the lives of the first and third Napoleons King Charles X and King Louis Philippe? What reader of history will forget the fate of their heirs ? King Louis Philippe‘s soD, the _ Duc d‘Orleans, while riding gayly along the Rue de la Revolte, in Paris, bhad . his neck broken. The younZ King of § Rome and the Comte de Chambord were both poisoned. The later was ; known to his friends as "King Henty \ V." The Duc de Berri, King Charles‘ , son, was stabbed to death at the opera®. i Spain‘s history has been equally as _ momentous. Old Queen Christina WaS deprived of her regency in a heartless ; manner and forced into exile. A score _ of years later her daughter, Queen Isaâ€" * bella, was deposed, and followed her moâ€" h ther into banishment. a TERRORS OF POISON. y â€" Neither love nor compassion moved the Spanish hearts and compelled King t Amadeus to abdicate and flee from the t country in midwinter. The blow was ; Wt s in ie e ds a terrible one, &nd it resulled IN . WMC death of his Queen, who was a woman in fragile bealth. In a duel fought at Madrid Prince Henry, of Bourbon, met death. Queen Mercedes and King Alfonso both died so mysteriously that there is just ground for the supposition that they were poisoned. Their illness was but of a few bhours‘ duration. _Possiblzv the most tragic and sensaâ€" tional affair of its kind ever known in SFam was the suicide of the husband of the Infanta Isabella. He killed himâ€" self in her presence. | AET 3 mUIL AM MNWRL RMOSRCAICCCC * Poison hbas always been & favorite with the Spanish assassin. Its effect is terribly subtile, and not always capaâ€" ble of detection. In Portugal it has been used with ghastly success, &S the history of that countrgoamply proves. An old resident of Lisbon can tell you how half a dozen members of the reigning family were put to death with poison about 40 fiears ago. Though the Czar of Russia has been crowned but a few weeks, already is the evil mind of the hidden assassin at work, and if the despatches from St. Petersburg are correct, at least one atâ€" tempt to end his life was frustrated by the imperial police. With the Czar eternal vigilance is the safeâ€"guard of life. Several attempts were made to take the life of his father. The predeâ€". cessor of the {)resent Czar‘s father met a most terrible fate. He was blown to atoms by nitroglycerine, after a numâ€" ber of attem{)te to murder him had been made Alexander L. and Nicholas are thought to have been murdered, poison being the a.gencfi em{)loyed. The greatâ€"grandfather of ‘Nicholas IL was strangled to death by Count Orloff and other members of his court. Both unâ€" cles of Alexander IIIL. died insane. PRINCE RUDOLPH‘S DEATH. The violent death of the Crown Prince Rudoiph of Austria is still enâ€" wrapped in mystery,, al‘th%xgh |_the hiA Ant 4 ced Ens EoS coachman who drove him to Meierling on the fateful night on which he met death partially lifted the veil before dying in a New York hospital about a year ago. The sbhooting of the Archduke Maxiâ€" milian in Mexico, and the insanity ofâ€" his spouse, the Archduchess Chariotte, | will always be regarded as among the saddest events in the history of Ausâ€" tria. Archduke Leopold became an inâ€" eurable lunatic, and his conduct was horrible to witness. The Archduchess Mathilde was burned to death, while Archduke John disappeared, none ever knew where. Several attempts were made to slay the Emlgeror Franz Josef. On one occasion the Emperor was badly stabbed. The _ Irishâ€"born e(‘uerry of the Emperor, Major O‘Donnell, fearing the knife was poisoned, sucked the wound. Old Bavaria has also had her full measure of woes. The appalling insanâ€" ity of King Otto still continues. Of all mad rulers he is the maddest ever known. Of herculean stature, he is at and it resulted in the TORONTO peror William of Germany died in madbouse after a restraint covering mzi.Od Of setmeyears_ & Mawama . <ht + thaaiiteti h scdier ons t * Arsiathatnd The present Emperor of Germany i m 6 has .. se Hrot from the at~ PRINCESS MAUD MARRIES PRINCE tacks of wouldâ€"be assassins. His grandâ€" l CHARLES OF DENMARK. tatther. rc;tJd Emperc'JlE‘h\N'lill:atni;n:fe ‘i{‘fi at sev k as! ‘ so b‘d°]’ wotln“lne(sied theat he was unahl_e ‘Albert EdAward, Prince of Wales Gives to govern his country, and upon his | Away Another Charming BDaughterâ€" son, Emperor Frederick, devolved that Queen Victoria, the Bride‘s Grandma, responsibility . Attends the Ceremonials in the Chapel Insanity held sway at Dresden. TD®| _ Royal, Buckingham Palace, late King of Saxony died [A mania¢, | v whose horrible ravings chilled one‘s | A despatch from London says :â€"â€"Prin« lt)lomfi. "Begore his death he -‘ueowtledhlil; cess Maud of Wales, youngest daughâ€" earfu injuring a member O s + h househo{'d. klindiess cursed a member ter of the Prince of \.‘ ulu; and grand of the house of Hesse, as well as the daughter of Queen Victoria, was marâ€" Grand Duke of Mecklenburgâ€"Strelitz. |ried on Wednesday to Prince Charles CHRRERILE AZCAWC L ADWGOEBCUSACCCBL 40 C% Italy‘s history is incarnadined with bloody deeds. Several attempts | have been made to kill King Humbert, but each time he escaped injury as if by a miracle. The reigning Dukes of Parma and Lucca have been assassinated > during the last 50 years, and many other traâ€" gedies equally as gruesome have taken plage in Italy.:.:.".}.._ . L o5ll; _ P o e ps 0 Sa% * Prince Ferdinand of Bulzaria narâ€" rowly escaped beinf murdered. Only the constant watchfulness of himself and his attendants prevented his death at the hands of murderers. a tthe hands of murderers. ; The King of Servia bhas also had his share of dangers. Once he came withâ€" in an ace of being blown to atoms by an explodinz dynamite bomb. THE FIELD OF COMMERACE. Some Items of Interast to the Busy Business Man. The stock of wheat at Toronto is 174,â€" 831 bushels as against 177,253 bushels last week and 24,267 bushels a year ago. A number of sales of new wheat in Ontario are reported the past few days. Red is selling at 59c., and white at 60c., western freights. The net currercy circulation in the United States on July ist was $1,509,â€" 725,200, a decrease of $194,406,768% in a zgfis The per capita circulation is now The money market at Toronto in unâ€" changed at 5 to 5 1â€"2 per cent. on call. Prime discounts 6 to 6 1â€"2 per cent. In New York call money is easy at 1 to There is a good deal of talk in New York of hoarding of gold, but this is denied. ‘The flold in the Treasury is again below legal requirements, °xâ€" change is stiffening, and gold exports continue. The general weakness of American stocks is noted in Cable and Postal both of which are held in considerable quanâ€" tities im Canada. Choice investments in London are strong, while Americans there are very weak. The strength of sterling exchange at New York creares an unsettled feeling in financiali circles, and it is expected that _considerable gold will be exportâ€" ed this week. ‘The United States Treasâ€" ury gold reserve is down in the neighâ€" borhood of $98,000,000. The Chicago Daily Bulletin taking the government report as the basis, esâ€" timates the crop of winter wheat in the United States at 264,216,000 bushâ€" els, against 257,709,000 bushels a year ago, and 179,422,000 bushels of spring, against 209,303,000 bushels a year a%o. He estimates the crop of corn at 2,243,â€" 170,000 bushels, and of ocats £25,000,000. Minneapolis mills produced only 149,â€" 570 barrels of flour week before last, against 238,100 the last week of June, and 99,500 a year ago. Domestic trade was light, but export shipments fairâ€" ly large. This week a much larfar is expected as mills are running on full time. Superiorâ€"Duluth grinding did not decrease, and 71,870 barrels were Proâ€" duced %Sinst 80,515 the week before, z[nd1859% for the corresponding week The visible supply of wheat in the United States and Canada has begun to increase early this season. There was an ipcrease last week of 21,000 bushels whereas during the corresponding week of last year, there was a decrease of 2,122,000 bushels. The visible is now 47,â€" 220,000 bushels as against 41,237,000 a cuGubaes Snd t dert db 1P mR OoRSEIET 1 220,000 bushels as ag&)inst 41,237,000 a year ago, and 53,154, two Eears ago. The amount on passage to Iurope is, however, only _ 22,560,000 bushels as against 40,320,000 bushels a year ago. The wholesale trade at Toronto this week is fairly satisfactory. The moveâ€" ment in seasonable goods is up to exâ€" pectations, and the assurances that no changes in the tariff will be made withâ€" in a year has allayed any feeling of unâ€" certainty that might have existed in industrial circles. Large stocks in hands of ‘manufacturers %reveqt any advances in w&tions. which in most respects may said so favor ‘the buy‘; k al olR 0 Oe rac unawr anttan am 1 0B 4200020 oi tthy ta 9t vaciuar n ts » + is for hides, which are again higher in sympathy chietly with the improved tone of western markets. . Cattle and cheese are exceptionally low owing to CA Eie Een dn t c stic A cable from Glasgow quotes the best cattle at 83â€"44. rer Jb. the low record mark. Reports from Western Ontario state that grain crops are exceptionalâ€" ly gond in many instances, but the hay crop is poor, althoufh probably gzeuter than last year. Sales of new Jtario red winter wheat have been made at 59c. and of white at 60c. The offerings of old white wheat seem restricted, and the British grain markets are hardenâ€" ing, Sterling exchange is higher this week in sympathy with New York5 where engagemegts of considerable gol for export are being made. The ltea ure P e s e ue 148 in the stock market is the decline in Commercial Cable and Postal Telegraph, both United States issues, This is due almost entirely to the unsettled feelâ€" ing over there created by a possibility that the party adoi))temg the free coinâ€" age of silver may successful in the November elections. JAPAN‘3 AWFUL CALAMITY. The steamer Empress of India, which arrived at Vancouver the other day from Japan, brings an official list of the casualties in the late disastrous tidal wave, which swept over the northâ€" ern part of the Island of Yezzo, as folâ€" lows: Deaths, 80,309; wounded, 6,112 ; houses destroyed, 10,062. Besides the above & large number of persons are missing. Five hundred and ninetyâ€" seven vessels of various sorts were mptawayordnnqodb,tbnn. i * LINKED IN GOLDBN C cess Maud of Wales, youngest daughâ€" ter of the Prince of Wales and grandâ€" daughter of Queen Victoria, was marâ€" ried on Wednesday to Prince Charles of Denmark, son of the Crown Prince and grandson of King Christian IX. of Denmark. The ceremony took place in the Chapel Royal, Buckingbam Pal« ace. The west end was profusely deâ€" corated with flags, flowers, eto. and there was a conspicuous blending of the British and Danish flags. The Life Guards and the Coldstream Guards ‘lined the route from Marlborough ‘House to Buckingham Palace, and \crowds of people, mostly ladies were | gathered in the vicinity of the Palace, \awaiting the arrival of the procession. A cavalcade of heralds and equirries escorted the bridegroom, who was Adâ€" companied by his parents, the Crown Prince of Denmark and _ Princess Harold. The Prince and Princess of Wales and all the Queen‘s children, with their famlies were in carriages, ©X~ cept Princess Beatrice of Battenberg and ber children, who were absent on account of their mourning for the death of Prince Henry of Battenberg. The Queen passed quietly into the chapel from Buckingham Palace. The cere \mony took place at 12.30 o‘clock. The weather was sunny and in every way pleasant. \_Prince Christian and Harold sup | ported Prince Charles, and the brides 1maids were Princess Victoria of Wales, | sister of the bride; and Princesses Inâ€" geberg and Thyra of Denmark, sisters | of the bridegroom ; Princess Victoria of Schleswizâ€"Holstein, Princesses Patricia and Margaret of Connaught, Princess Alice of Albany and_ Lady Alexandra Duiff, daughter of the Duke of Fife se d Rrainnsce . Kâ€"mnmtes ot Wales.w 'l‘he Away Another Charming BDaughterâ€" Queen Victoria, the Bride‘s Grandma, Attends the Ceremonitais in the Chapel Royal, Buckingham Palace. A despatch from London says:â€"Prinâ€" and Margaret of Connaught, Princess Alice of Albany and Lady Alexandr@& Duff, daughter of the Duke of Fife and Princess Louise of Wales. â€" The Most Rev. Edward _ White Benson, Archbishop of Canterbury and Primate of all England, officiated, umwi by the Bishops of London and Winchester. the PDishOP8 VA los gave the bride e uL To 1e SW The Prince of Wales gave the DIGG nwag.‘ After the ceremony the bridal party and guests %rmok of â€" luncheon iD Buckinihnm alace, at the conclusion of which the Royal bridal party, beadâ€" ed by the bride and bridegroom, left the ~Palace in carriages for Marlâ€" borough â€" House. The party left the Palace at 245 pmM. and took the route e is . ~ Tamas s«trect. borough HNOP® _ _‘ Taok Palace at 245 pM. and took the route via Piccadilly and St. James street, both of which were beautifully decorat» ed. All of the houses wero draped with flags, b\mtinfi. etc.,. and there was & Fmt’usion of flowers. The streets were lined with sightseers and the windows of the clubs and other build= ings along the route were filled with peo%le, mosdfl ladies. The bridal couple afterwards _ left Marlborough _ House for St. Pancras Station, where they took a special where *PO).. _taik to take DLAatON, C2C~ //_ _ "aru, train for Wolferton, Norfolk, possession of _ Appleton | Ha will henceforth be their hom« U 2atos amects je 10 cts. Cures Constipation and Liver Ilis.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magit, Sick Headache, Constipation, Biliousâ€" ness, Indigestion and all Liver Ills. 10 cents a vialâ€"40 doses. 10 cts. Cures Constipation Ilis.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s Liver Pi most perfect muie‘,‘and cure N OX o Pit en cÂ¥ Fimie P eg _Bill the l}ifterâ€""Wlut’l d‘ object of dis _ organization uy . YOUIS mister?" Mission Workerâ€"*"To rescue the fall= en. my man." â€" Bill the Bi(lfprâ€"-l':Ye'u. w ass M cwes: ie mnter d N don‘t talk ter me, I‘ Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved in 10 to 60 Minutes.â€"One short puff of the breath through the Blower, supâ€" plied with each bottle of Dr. . Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this powder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use, It reâ€" lieves instantly, and permanently cures Catarrh, Hay Fever Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tomilids and Deafness. Brownâ€"Have {:u read this article upon * How to tell a bad egg !" ‘Jonesâ€"No, but if you have anything to tell a bad egg. it gently. Heart ALDHBCaBE L9 0""" 0s 4y utes.â€"Dr. Agnew‘s ([‘ure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Orâ€" gnic or Sympathetic Heart Disease in minutes, and speedily effects “fl"' It is a peerless "m’w Palpitation, Shortness of Breath, thering 8pel§ il’ain in Left Side and all symptoms a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. and hbis brothers Chbristian and THE PROPER METHOD. Disease Relieved in 80 if you have amythi tay advice is to break I‘m no bicyclist." bristian IX. y took place ingbam Pal« rofusely deâ€" rs, eto.. and blending of gs. The Life cam â€" Guards Marlborough Palace, and ladies were BX ECCE ick the satin of folds to the left i MY ceinture i in silver and t * d nrace 24

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