F sSCRIPTURE. se in the BRible is the th chapter of Esther, he 35th verse of the . John ;# also the word ut onceâ€"the 9th vers@ . im. Here are & -b'.‘ ures: The word chick». . in Matthew xxiile i6,480 letters m1:1 . 1,.189 chapters, 50. " and * occurs 16.271 _ "* Lord "* 1850 in the Bible is 118th Psaim. The 18th Psaim. The Lath alway are now prep MPTLY. »wc.l::r‘t-;r:;l' KK er of Isaiab are ds er namen 0. TEN CONSENT yphilis, Emi ancocele,. 148 SHELEY $ T RO!IT, MICH. ' memâ€"â€" ey Heqs â€"2. . 0 tity of Sash, d the differ. side shecting, so that all ordem NFIDENT AL c KECHNIE, 1; tired mornings; 4: exrcitable mflrm R NO PAY i D VICTIMS. rtsman who fails to permission from th@ actor CURED! H cors, sOre nfdence; e countless ) years of as are & f“ fflï¬r‘ word chick= '::“; tthew xxiil | _ ers, 773146 _ ) ce POW ES i n 0 l i 00 ayste m were «nd physical t to cw New M in, with new . ind now 1 T. PRIâ€" r envel= f Treat= » reliable out avail. SsIons Cured. ion Free ited), om 4 mar. RS DJ to # of I gooulre +4 the H Harts er HE C eresting Item® Ir &1 B Mrs Jonutkh U VA vaaus ty I r famous berd of Jerseys to Mr. artz of Prince Edward Ialand. ‘ The grain, root and ba crcï¬ in rt Hope and_Poterboto' x{idl"w are ported as giving &n excellent yield. The peach crop in the district about :. Catharines will be & failure. Othâ€" fruits are generally abundant. The byâ€"law :_Appointing Mr. E. G. Barâ€" yw City Engineer, al & salary olg‘2.- i was passed by the Hamilion City l0 ve gK It A MISBL o;;‘ -Mull- All Parts of Assorted tor 2 with (Go COs the Dominion work over. Manitoba‘s 1 The Nor‘West year‘s, a good damaged by mM The 50th ant of Sir Charle be celsbrated October 8. For the firs of the Domini flewj up to d readiness â€" The reports Columbia sta ing towns ar immense loss farmers. The Goderi law granting adflw‘wl l'))' rust. The 50th anniver: of the marria; of Sir Charles u:iuisdy Tupper wï¬\ tbe celsbrated by a golden wedding on October 8. | For the first time on record the work of the Dominion Supreme Court is comâ€" pleted up to date, and all the judges are in readiness for the October lists. The reports of forest fires in British Columbia state that many of the minâ€" ing towns are in danger, and already § U C005 Ahsaw Aansut t« tht ncil <«_a~ THE (ablU y EPS Pqll CAVE very LATEST FROM 4 | Thefl;j‘ s fon in ‘1:;: p tuat WORLDOVER' lbv military man in I Mr. John 5. SMiddieman, O° °MB ham, is in Ottawas for the furpon of inâ€" terviewing the Government on the subâ€" ject of the immigration of juveniles to this country. 1 224 MO PPR C MB ECE S * ‘he Montreal rolling mills, which | were closed down fer some time, have | been _ restarted, and some four hunâ€" | dred men, who were beginning to feel the pinch of poverty, have found cmâ€"‘ ployment. It is reported that Chief Archibald Skirv'm%. of Ingersoll, will be appointâ€" ed to the provincial detective service, to fill the vacancy caused by the resigâ€" nation of Provincial Detective McKee. Mr. T. K. Lawr{ of Hamilton has entered an action for $10,000 damages against Mayor Tuckett and the Passâ€" mores, who recently assaulted him, alâ€" le%'mg conspiracy on the part of the defendants. Mr. F. A. Knapp, a Prescott barrister, is in Ottawa to interest the Minister of Marine on an ocean steamer which he has invented, which, he says, can make the voxag‘hotween the Labraâ€" dor coast an land in twentyâ€"s0Â¥vâ€" _ Alex. T. Porter, representing sh nspittlipts. is trying to estabâ€" nluttoirs on & large scale nsar s3 engine the, oo "C" . k Dominion Government to y are bLoing maxer << o : rang*eâ€" .se tracts of prairie land Larning Over. P mt C O ls t x0 k as be aitempted suicide two years this theory l:.:eem:n.t’u-uml. see GREAT BRITAIN. Sir Peary Anderson, assistant Underâ€" Becretary, in the Foreign Office, is dead. aNMICEC eqRene en Drought bhas produced & severe water famine in the east end of London, and prolonged rains are needed to avert seriâ€" us u:nsequenoeq. C o oo . 9 5.. er George B. was The new Burmah railway loan of two millions and six bundred thousand E»o\mds was placed on the market in ndon and subscribed for twenty times over. _ A despatch from Constantinople say8 that forty prosperous rv(i’l’l.:!m around Van Hub have been dest: , and very i3 w sOn strate 1 a‘s wheat crop, accordin Wester, will not equal good deal of the grain I e . 9 k the Globe, Condensed and Basy Reading. CANADA. About Our Own Country, the United States, and on L & WCCC" n has been appointed » of Winnipegâ€" | Power CompanYy offer | on Wlth water !“ '1.'. being thrown made to the Ridâ€" ompany has | any more gold. | 1 points on\ Forest fires are y . |\in Washington Te s, has sold | rapidity. eys to Mr‘ Millionaire Joh iland. | made _ Cleveland, .M,op. in ‘znft of $1,000,000. istricts are _ Ten lives were and the PSS | of Formosa. aulted him, alâ€" ® Massacres e part of uâ€â€˜mrod at Orc # wore killed. scott barrister, | _ Reports of t the Minister ‘mmt favorab steamer which ports of last . he says, can | M Rugene 4 t male more than eight years of has | been killed. * se en |\ _ Complaints are bei made that the Martiniâ€"Henry Amm‘::?tion of 1896,Engâ€" lish issue fails to come up to the stanâ€" dard ; but it passed the inspection of the | . The situation in Rhodesia is regarded | by military men in England as vyerY grave, and in their opinion the force at the disposal of Sir Frederick Carrington is utterly inadequate. grave, and in their opinion the 10rC® &4 | _ mpore pog the disposal of Sir Frederick Carrington Their Beds and Its Failureâ€"Fiftecen uT::ual, inadequate. Sepoys MHanged on One Callows ‘ ueen, through United States| Old Tom Tierney, of Newark, NJ ’ Ambassador Bayard, has sent &R ®Xâ€" 47 ud Pll\i"l ' pression of her gyra,titude to the citizsens | :' hero of ’?"‘8“‘“" war with sell ) of Dceala, Fla..who recently planted and | 1837, and is one of the few men liv= | :ii:ltx;at.od a magnolia tree to ber hih‘rtki:d‘t,hayho saw and took actual | * pa performance which some Mr. Balfour announced in the House | histori seen fi «* of Commons on Wednesday that he fearâ€" | :x‘l:t::um ha.v ( fis to oull »o Pakâ€" ed there would not be time this session | j j ; crowning act of shame;" the ::1 m fï¬gnï¬,"‘â€â€™dl rgo.. Sist.?r bcuhlp | :wx:tg of Sepoy rebels from the muzâ€" 1 orts wou made for zles cannon in the East Indies. ‘paasmg.of the Irish Land bill. He has lively recollections of the : toI[':e g?lbt; é{r ;)tomnï¬i greg::rtembrlg\)lght historic episode, but exbivits little feelâ€" ial Government has finally reluaafet‘; ing Avtrhenhta.lk e & t.’o.“t' it. permit the U| 3 ship Company _suc times civilized men are not to erect on the live stock wharft at | in their right mind," said he on a recent &;lï¬(u:st adpmldmg in which to slaughâ€" | night to a reporter. "In the time ot‘ ‘anadian catl‘s. a battle I could see all my own lying t. UNITED STATES. dead about me and not shed a tear. | _ _Kansas Cit{ banks refuse to pay out | No, my â€"boy, men are not themselves ‘tnéomo:ef_zo d. he vail at such times. They‘re just crazy."‘ | rest fires are sweeping the valley3 Tom Tierney was born at Enniskillen | in Wash i ible | . | fapt dft.“y ‘mgton Territory with termibl®e oounty Fermanagh, Ireland, in 1833, ! Millionaire John R. Rockefeller has .‘nd 1t wan t.l.xere that he enlisted gng.?de Cleveland, Ohio, a centennial in the army in 1849. He was & "tel _s a+ n\ AnN big lump of a boy at sixteen at the 1 PC ARBIEUT O . Forea't. fires are aweeping the valleys in Washington Territory with terrible rapidity. Millionaire John R. Rockefeller has made ~Cleveland, Ohio, a centennial es SCs Wmnenmniayy Ten lives were lost in & flood which followed a cloudburst in Frankfort, Gorman Swain killed his three youngâ€" est children and then suicided, near Attica, Mich., on Tuesday. Herbert C. Spencer, of Lawrence, Kas., has the disease known as mental blindness. He has lost all memory. "Bilty" Ward, the noted minstrel has become an evangelist. He attri butes his conversion to the St. Loui: cyclone. w ho o LC «e uc c2fm S NeE _ George J. Gould, the New York milâ€" lionaira, is preparing for an extended northern cruise on his yacht Atalanta. Nicola Tesla, the electrical enfimer claims to have solved the problein of the longâ€"distance transmissions of eleoâ€" tricity. Notices are posted that the Amos keag Mills, Manchester, N. H., will elose in August indefinitely. This will throw out 6,000 operatives. 1 E L2 ks | 77° Te EEENim. : CmoRt nRein Auel ons ces John C. Howard, Deputy Town Marâ€" shal of Tulare, was bhanged at San Franâ€" cisco for the murder of an Italian in a political quarrol. Etta Robbins, 1%1 24, has been jailâ€" ed at Huntington, W. Va., for the murâ€" der of a father and his two daughters. She had attempted to kill a whole family. Car barns, 250 cars and 50 horses, belonging to the Chicago City Railway Co., were destroyed b{ fire in Chmngb !&‘)‘0 Saturday nmight, at a loss of $359,â€" \ _ The death is announced of Right |Bov. Arthur Cleveland Coxe'k Episcoâ€" | pal Bishop of Western New York, and | a most consgicuous figure in the Amâ€" | erican church. | of gold and decline in the | serve, Businessâ€"which is | at this time of yearâ€"has I ’ubly further degreased by | financial unrest. The | kets have been much de | especially marked the low i record. â€" The in(}ust{ial kets nave NCCT °/A Garagt / especially marked the lowest fifuresop record. _ The industrial â€" out ook is gloomy, as owing to utoppe{e of works in cifferent parts of the country the puIâ€" chasing power of the dpeople has alâ€" ready sensibly decreased, and no proâ€" spect of an early improvement appears to be in sight. The sales of wool this week are the smallest known for years. Massac f the fevers â€" was due to ‘rederic s continue in the 18°20C are reportod to l‘". 00â€" de, in which 25 Armenians ‘ the crops in France St° »ls compared with the reâ€" xA ;.;l'? '.;p“nv. &v-t'f; 1 . this transfusion dm MEX BLOWX FROM GUNS. OLD TOM TIERNEY‘S CAMPAIGNS IN PERSIA AND INDIA. His Story of an Attempt by Native Indian Soldiers to Murder British ioldler_l in ons eeinne Comie oR c o2lt T time, and although the recruiting offiâ€" cer enrolied him, he could not get him sworn in, and they took him along withâ€" out the cath. In the barracks and on the parade ground at Brentford, in Essex, they made a soldier of him, and & good one, too. The growing boy ripâ€" ened into a soldierly, broadâ€"shouldered, and erect man. He was five and oneâ€" half feet tall when he enlisted, and barrack life in England added over six inches to his stature before he was 21 years old. THE HARD LIFE OF A SOLDIER ir began in 1856, when he embarked with | t: !ï¬s comrades at Gravesend to do duty | t] in the Second Bombay European Light | t Infantry. They had a long but deâ€" | i lightful trip to Bombay, and then folâ€" | t lowed a weary season of barrack life | p in the hot Indies, with occasional relief in mabhort trips into the interior, but | t Tom‘s first battle was not in India. | When war was declared against Persia the Second Bombay and other regiments | 1 were ordered to the Persian Gulf under | Gens. Outram and Wilson. The trip | from Bombay was made in a steamer | . with twotransports in tow. Tom‘s first |° engagement was at Bushire, where the |â€" British troops disembarked and assaultâ€" | ed an earthwork known as the Dutch | fort, It was taken after & hot fight, and was followed next day by the capâ€" |ture of the city of Bushire. Tom was 'L in the thick of the liiht.ing, but _esâ€" caped without & scratch, though Gen. | Outram was said to have received eleâ€" ven flesh wounds. 4 It was in these engagements that â€"|\the big Irish soldier came to the conâ€" â€" | clusion that a man in battle lost his â€" | senses. He says "that the whole fact . | of the battle‘‘ is as clear in his mind i |toâ€"day as it was at the time of it, but. 1| he knew notbhing of the details which â€" | followed the breaching of the earthâ€" 4 | work fort with the artillery, and the rush of himself{ and comrades through a | the gap. # y n His campaign in Persia was brief. p | They went into the interior and were . | cut off from supplies by an armed force 0 that outnumbered the Europeans nearâ€" ly ten to one. An attack was ordered _land the enemy fled. After occu‘py:ax‘;(gi 1 l LieL _A0 Haw % Ar to marched us CE 10 Td d ts lï¬ e intyctnfietit lt wE FORMED IN LENE. The artillery WaB loaded with ï¬tape and canister and all our guns were oadâ€" ed, but we went through the motion of loading AgAiD, and then the General called upon the Sepoys to pile arms and surrender. He called upon them twice and then ordered us to aim. "Then he shouted &A8@A!N : ‘Sepoys, for the third and last time, 1 order you to nd I9®" """~* / a dAisnerse to fters! A2U" U~" _ Aennne the cowardly devils mp‘;d and skulked away. ( up and took charge _ Of is. .. Fifty _ of _ them, WO1d 3+ so ‘was no trouble to find down and EUE WU MMD CG CC C 1 again: ‘Sepoys, for time, I order you to ms and "“Ef“’ to hen one after the iselves | business ay." may be â€" killen, | twelveâ€"y 1833, | shoulder. nlisted | scantily was a | but alwa at the |a good ! iz offiâ€" | baby‘s el " Dutch | the st i the st. t fight, AT e capâ€" familie om wWas sudden but _esâ€" | head, : zh _ Gen. | "q ; ved el¢~ | The s : that | P og, he COP" | usual lost his | in oh» ole f?'c(ti gelf f is min f it, but | P94b° s which | saiq t 6 e&rth' him *# and the | pof, through | per, ; s brief. throu ind were 9.0.2."4 had its aumber. quietly put unds nad 18 BWHRUOREA C077 .0 222 quietly g:’t under arrest, and fifteen others who were said to be ringleaders were taken into custody at the same time. The next day they had a drumâ€" THBHO, LHD REER® CAJ TCOW 00 c2 .ms head court martial, and were all oen-‘ tenced to death. 1 saw fifteen men hanging from one gallows that dtI and fifty more tied to the muzzles 0 the g&m, as all the pictures show them, t each man was tied with a piece of rope around his waist that gave him a foot leeway, but he could not get out of range. Some were blown in half, and others were !lu.nï¬ u& in the air and came down dead. It did not affect \ me much. I was hardened by the knowâ€" ing that every one of them would serve EW C1 _3 Aha ahaman â€"‘ Tt wan 411% D OPVEORY SE ENCn C me worse if he had the chance. It was & dirty sight, though, one which I nevâ€" erâ€" tpg?._gh.t. to see, and want never to Touching Incident in the Life of One of These Children. A new charity bas lately been started in one or two of our largest cities. One of the city sights almost as common on the back street as the newsboy in the tbmnn' ess centre, is the little girlâ€"she may be seven years old, she may be twelveâ€"with a baby tossed over her shoulder. Thin, bhungryâ€"looking, often scantily clad, never playing herself, but always looking on at others having & good time, the little motherâ€"the baby‘s elder sisterâ€"represents & life of devotion that is apparently borne withâ€" out complaint. Every moment watching her charge, that would be a burden to an older personâ€"waiting longingly for the real mother to come home at night from her lonx day‘s work to give the relief which too often is not given,â€"the little moâ€" ther is the embodiment of suffering ti-‘ delity that rarely fails to excite symâ€" pathy in the thoughtful observer. Pure sympathy has found expression in a society formed for the purpose of taking the babies off the little moâ€" thers‘ hands, so as now and then to give \theso elder sisters a much needed outâ€" ing and rest. It was a happy inspiraâ€" oo 8e TEA 0 in n oke €40 CVE ARmiC es ut tion that concerned this charity, which possibly was suggested by A TOUCHING INCIDENT that occurred some time ago in New York. ‘ There was an alarm of fire in one of the crowded tenement regions. Great columns of smoke arose from the upâ€" per windows of an apartmentâ€"house, and when the engines arrived a porâ€" tion of its bhallway was in flames. By this time most of the tenants were in the street. In one of the groups of families gathered there, & girl of nine suddenly clapped hber hands to her head, and cried out: ‘ "O mother! where‘s the babyt" The mother had not thought of the child, as she had not been accustomed to care for it. She supposed that, as usual, the baby‘s older sister had it in charge, and instead of blaming berâ€" gelf for neglect, she blamed the little mother with hysterical severity. "I thought you had him, mother," said the girl, patiently, ‘"but I can get Before any one thought of sboppln% her, she darted past the firemen, an through the smoke coming from the door, into the burning bullding.lgf two tl'uihts of stairs she stasfge groped for a familiar room, an< there she found the baby. Thoughtless @8 usual for herself, she rolled him in thick blankets, and began the terriâ€" ble_descent to the street. By this time la fireman was sent to look for her, but was drivem back by the seemed The same situation mi a similar brave deed of a home. It should be however, that tpe one n Two Shipâ€"Buillding Shops in Belfast Almost Wiped Outâ€"YVery Heavy Loss, } A despatch from Belfast says:â€"The Harland and Wolff and Workman and Clarke shipâ€"building shops and their contents have been almost wiped out by fire. The conflagration started in the establishment of Harland and Wolff, and spread to that of the Workâ€" man and Clarke Company. The yards alone were damaged to the amount of 1i rnn Ni _ Tater. it was learned that $1,500,000. Later, it was learned that the total loss by fire at the shipâ€"yards would not amount to more than $1,â€" 500.000. . The property destroyed was partly insured. The works with the marine engineerâ€" ing works attached cover an area of nearly eighty acres. The firms employâ€" ed upwards of 8,000 hands, and the comâ€" pulsory idleness of a large number of them will cause much inconvenience, if \not suffering. a.mon%e their families. The yards were on the Admiralty list LITTLE MOTHERS In6 . YAPOS VC L o . wocusle fo as suitable for building vessels for the Royal Navy. ; The fire began early on Monday morning in the engineering deâ€" g?rtt.nentihea?d as a high Wl(!llld w:jaa owin lames sgread rapidly, deâ€" spite &» efforts of the local firemen, who were greatly gsxsbed in their work by the employes in the yards. The fire was communicated to the buildings in the shipâ€"yard of Clarke and Oom?my, admnmgv Harland and Wolfif. â€" The ldings in both yards, which were mostly huge wooden strucâ€" tures, were destroyed. An“ mmenhs: NelePelin Cns io C iL quantity of valuable machinery D6 longing to vessels now in the course of finishing at the yards, was ruined, 88 were also the tools and machinery beâ€" Ianging to various shops. DESTRUCTIVE FIRE. TORONTO mon on | is equal to aDout oP, PC in the | there. _ rirlâ€"she Canadian banks are may be part of their balances frc ver her States. . On Mond‘{l * was shipped from New g, often | ada. $ e TAE FIELD OF COMMERCE. Some Items of Interest to "he Busy week were 5,500,000 bushels. Toronto 31â€"2 per cent. debentures are selling in London at 104 exâ€"interest. The Customs revenue for the year reaches a total of $20,172,778, an inâ€" crease of $2,250,000. us P OPPFT It is stated that Cable and FOBUVS! | Telegraph stocks have been boucht‘ lately on the_ Toronto and Montreal y markets for English account. = The Canadian Pacific Railway earnâ€" C ings for week ending July 14th, were |\‘ $109,000, and for the same week last |‘ year,$3143,000 ; increase $66,000. 1 At an auction sale in London lately |‘ Canadian cheese sold at an average | price ofz&.gt box of 112 lbs. This‘* is equal to about 56. per lb. delivered | there. Canadian banks are withdnwinc\ part of their balances from the United | States. On Mondnï¬ $350,000 in md! was shipped from New York for â€" ‘ _ Business Man. TboUnionBankhuopemdsmh The world‘s shipment ©BVIES: The gold reserve of the United States treasury is down to $89,603,000. At a meeting of New York bankers it was agreed to supply the treasury with on NNï¬ NA in anld in exchange {or legal meetling OL NOWV i28" U Dove . with a_greod to supply the treuu.r{ with | tired to the teaâ€"room, wWhero *M6) M7"" 020,000.0“) in cOld in exchange for lecd a wnn of their lady friends and r relatives, all of whom had high hopes The exports for. 1896 show a total of of the acquittal of the prisoners. $118,140,504, an increase of $7,500,000, . THE VERDICT the hbighest amount in the history of The j after havh.ll retired at the country, with the exception of 208 | about 4%‘:’;:&“!‘“ at about 5.24, an year. The â€" imports total $110,587.808, | Ttho defendants were hastily summon an increase of exactly $5,000,000. to take their places. The judges came The earnings of the Grand Trunk ‘ in five minutes later, and The ju.r{m‘ Railway for the week ended July 1l4th can:t an a.fï¬!xl'_m:til:';l ulx:wer to al ;n were $373,088, an increase of $16,385 as questions wnICB 1. o Pal t ce s to them the Chief Justice ; ut they compared with the corresponding week | added a r‘ï¬er to the effect that the dis« of last year. . There was an increase | turbances at Johannesberg WOTO proâ€" in Canadian Pacific earnings for the | vocative. Lord Russell tf.e.n_ directed game week of $66,000. that their answers were equivalent to The Mislche sopels ot whent in . the | 2. 08Wb\ C160 tiee Pace Popintnner United States and Canada is now 46,.â€" ey were n o | us that point. Thereu his Lordâ€" 743,000 bushels, a decrease of 477,000 | shpflf mm&d that the e were of the bushels for the week. . The total a | jurymen | to the questions proguunded year aq791 was 40,483,000, and two years ; were equivalent to a verdict of guilty Aro 53,771,000 bushels. The amount of | against all the defendants. The ,Lur! ) bushels. The amoubt O | 8800990 Dited together for about threk :ï¬sml.ooï¬ bushels. 1b¢ 4BOU/* O0 | +Pon sensulted tort wheat afloat to Eur:Fe is 21,360,000 | then consulted together for aDOUF : bushels, & decrease 1,200,000 last minutes, and alterwards rende! week, while the amount on ;{:‘ace a | verdict of guilty. year ago was 38,240,000 bushels. APPARENTLY UNMOVED. Montreal wholesale trade shows little| Dr. Jameson and his coâ€"defen . uo‘ "/ "01 o‘ "ommnReantly unmoved wha year ago was 38, 240,0UU DUSHCIS, 424 & ERAIZCC CCC CC Montreal wholesale trade shows litth\ Dr. Jameson and his coâ€"defendantsa change during the past week, and is of | were amrenuy unmoved when the 3 ercetr ie cnciier. © Amons | Tasl plarke mt tincourtp, antin, s + s the court‘s grocery J0 bbers there is rather mote ‘ tion to move for a new trial. The engquiry, but country orders are but {\_ldgea afuerwards retired for consulta= moderate, and city retailers report & 1(;2& &(I:lflu dku‘:rincdth;i: gehisense Sir Edâ€" ‘ i i L 1 w | W r and endants conâ€" Talling off in business, owing to the ©®~ | Sujtaq together with the 1esUif that odus of customers to the country. Canâ€" | when the judges returned Sir Edward ners are reported to be doing consider» | Clarke swi that in view of the verdict able cutting in prices of new vegetables, | rendered the defendants refused to inâ€" etc. _ Dry goods orders are numerical-“tr‘.mt {gr alae“;lg ial, and expressed & ly about uEu to the average, but, as beâ€" desire to settle the ©aSt To * fore sta are mostly on the small THE SENTENCES. side, _ Bleached cottons have been reâ€"| Lord Russell said that the verdict duced from 5 to 10 pet cent. on the| was given on evidence which no reage last October list. Boot and shoe men ; onable man would be able to disregard. are still dmï¬ossd to complain, and the | All the defendants, he added, were men leather market is very dull as regards , of pusitiou and intelligence, holding local orders, but a steady export moveâ€" | positions under the Queen, and thelr ment prevails in sole, and &)erwes | crime had the gravest consequences, erally are steadily held under & Emn | including death to some and injury to market for hides, and stocks do not | others, while the future consequences \ show any great accumulation. The regâ€" | of their crime no one was yet able to | ular midâ€"summer dullness prevails in ‘ foresce. Continuing, the Lord Chief | metals, hardware, paints and oils, a Justice said, that although they all |10,000 barrel contract for cement was | took part in the raid the court must » glaced a few days aï¬:_.ntp be used on | distinguish between them in the puUDâ€" ‘ |\the works of the Lachine Rapids Hyâ€" | ishment awarded for their guilt. His | draulio Cqm%a;;y. but the general deâ€" | Lordship then %assed sentences . upon | mand in this is very light. There , the prisoners. Dr. Jameson was seDnâ€" â€" l is little _apparent prospect for any imâ€" | tenced to fifteen months‘ imprisonment ent prosp®e®t +0T "0J |" / _ | without labour; Major .Sir John \fhli- aP mal.oâ€"7] a tan mun # BUC» SEreRene n LCs CS duced from 5 to 10 pef cent. on LBO . last October list. Boot and shoe men are still d.urgossd to complain, and the leather market is very dull as regards local orders, but a steady export moveâ€" ment prevails in sole, and (fr'wes gen- erally are steadily held under a LrM market for hides, and stocks do not show any great accumulation. The regâ€" ular midâ€"summer dullness prevails in metals, hardware, paints and oils, & 10,000 barrel contract for cement was €laced a few days ag;:;nt.o be used on he works of the Lac ine Rapidslady- CC 4% 0 inams Aâ€" m PAFV P ) _ eaom i P They intend to keep the reserve infaCt so as to ayvoid the necessity of the Govâ€" ernment in issuing new bonds before election day._ In the ordinary course of events the United States should be beâ€" g::nmg to import gold on ite increasâ€" \ exports of grain and cotton. Madagascar Promises a Rich Yield of the Precious Metal. : P scnl: "t ‘There seemés WAILAN® »0° *""% * 20 d that â€" Madagascar will provide the . world‘s next great gold field. Since the « French conquest the country has beâ€" ‘ gun to be prospected, and the results â€" have been very encouraging. No reefs have been discovered yet, but there is scarcely a district of the island which has not yielded alluvial oÂ¥old in paying quantities, and finds big nuggets have been made; but if the French can help it nobody but Frenchmen will be allowed to share these riches. While not absolutely excluded from the country, foreigners are viewed with suspicion, thwarted at every turn, and concessions ofmykindamrq!usedeothem. The g:licy is a shortâ€"sighted one, and inâ€" Migent Frenchmen d?lore it, but the Government is afraid of the Paris newsâ€" m and dreads interpellation in the ter of Deputies, where speculaâ€" tors. who hope to ggl‘gnt Madagascar, tors, who hope to expioit BM are strong!y mqu-naï¬i* A NEW GOLD FIELD. warrant Thig® C * rant for the belief will provide the | Light Sentences Fassodaâ€"EPOm ERTTAA _0_ Five Months Without Labourâ€"Their ‘ Life Begins at Once Within the Walls of Holloway. A despatch from London says:â€"The Sl;ttondnnoe at the trial of Dr. Jameson § m on CE Aon cenoale © enemn ht ‘M PR. JAMESON CONVICTED, and his associates i:;évvâ€"- AS the YIOW IU0 is re. that claim. A r at has made in the So reased. | O five miles 8 in most | Four feet of soll Ontario which runs $50 re, al.| Was recently bo e greatâ€" large and rich | | proviâ€" just been opene money | ore in some pla ates for and runs as Big There ments bhave alre ble and tons & day now i6 ADd _ Lntad that 4 Lord Russe!ll‘s sumiming up, AOWeYV‘, and his two bhours‘ recapitulation of the evidence was old nenee c cehes lt Scanatantcnnnicts. Aiintsmcar n ui of all present, indulged in a series of cat naps, while the other defendants were dozing at times. . Besides, Sir Richard Webster and his associates were clearly wearied, and lolled about, and Sir Edward Clark alone showed an}J signs of nervousness. He frowned tree quently at Lord Russell‘s emphasis against the prisoners. As for the jury, \mposod. with two exceptions, of eldâ€" erly men, there was no doubting that ie o on ro db ds mss 1 ie ol us they were bored» The ladies, of wDOM ‘thore were a great number in the court, | fanned themselves wearily while trying to catch glimpses of the defendants. ‘The latter, while the jury was out, x: C Li i. l COUEILE J + 1 26pI9e®) VISBOTS . ___ ston, the commending of 4 the comman ofâ€" m To¢ net io Matabeicland, and Gen. Rlioh and inâ€" onar commanderâ€"iD in the Souâ€" , but the m'dmunmwnwuchotber. ris newsâ€" Y80, ‘made strong compIain{$ 0) iuk unds Wikinaniatie oo wih Comniple uns ~ tho .B __..:.Y:‘mmw of experts to :flnï¬(alna 4 ANCE -31 Ee mmE C ur ces at Johannes were pro« vocative. â€" Lord lwuelm directed that their answers were equivalent to a verdict of guilty, but the foreman ‘nid that they were not unanimous y that point. ‘Thereupon his Lordâ€" | ship repeated that the answers of the ljm‘ymen to the questions prggoungied were equivalent to a verdict guilty | against all the defendants. The jurY | then consulted together for about threo L LCC ama © / a fraveraincds m“md & COMPANIONS ALSO BROUGHT IN GUILTY. without 1aDbour , 2"90"¢ /" / 0/ ami loughby was sentenced to ten months‘ imprisonment ; Major R. White . WaSs sentenced to seven months‘ imprisonâ€" ment ; and Caiu‘m Henry F. Covenâ€" try (a son of Earl Coventry) Col. R. Gray, and Col. H. F. White, were senâ€" tenced to five months‘ imprisonment. An important strike has been made in View claim, lying north of St. Elâ€" ma. an the west of the Southern Belle Cld Rivtccdindcacioiiitn it in Rossland, BC. The ore runs OVer 15 per cent. copper and $7 gold. It is the highest grade copper yet found, and has a beautiful appearance. . The View did not take a prominent position among the mines there, and the value of Southern Belle is greatly increased, as the View ledge runs directly into that claim. A rich strike has also been made in the Sovereign, which is four or five miles southeast of Rossland. Four feet of solid ore has been opened, which runs $50 gold. The Sovereign was recently bonded for $25,000. Very large and rich bodies of ore have also just been opened in Crown Point. The ore in some places is twelve feet wide and runs as high as $70 in gold. Shipâ€" ments have already commenced, fifteen tons & day now being taken out. It is oo otad that Crown Point will rival es awa and runs as Dign 38 ments have already © tons a day now being expected that Crown War Eagle. Strikes and Coxeyâ€" It Mas no Stopping Capacity â€"Bisastrous Defect in Fighting Bavages. The question of the stepping capacity of a bullet fired from the rifle which is now the standard arm of British inâ€" fantry bas reached a somewhat acute w2 1/ lafle hi : NeGIK uscd se C®" C VO efal comparatively ineffective. The Mat® bel% for instance, seem rather to like it. Unless the builet strikes a vital organ it no more stops a wounded man‘s charï¬ than would a pop&un. During the Matabele attack on Capt. Laing‘s detachment in the Matopo hills last week there must have been quite 200 of the onem( wounded, but only those actually killed dropped on the field. The others fought on cheerfuily with wounds which ought to have disabled. The same th%u happening in the Soudan, and cers acquainted . with the Madbi‘s warriors predict disaster B * o 0 Lemx from this GOLD AND COPPER MINING. DOUGAH, UU" _ Liave nI the Madbi‘s warriors predict disaster to the Angloâ€"Egyptian army from this cause alone when it is brought face to UWOB® """ain bhody of the derâ€" , while the jury was out, I® re teaâ€"room, where they held a of their lady friends . and all of whom had high hopes wou. VEBCC L9 .M ue ficer in ma'ï¬eleh.ngi and Gen. BALCH® emner, commanderâ€"inâ€"chief in the Aor. "an,‘ of course unknown to each other, have 0t ) "thore is Te doubt. bat re ittle Sae Sritish War Office will "'.,,em,;:‘t led to appoint a committe® of 9 Remarkably . ‘The opening part Passedâ€"From Fifteen to THE MODERN BULLET. C 0000 1 ult Avacaliinien cattiets bis 6i / E llet fired from the rifle which the standard arm of British inâ€" has reached a somewhat acute Wherever the rifle has been ainst a savage foe it has proved 1% miâ€" "Hfaknâ€" 10antus, 20 SARRRTY C Wls and â€"intelligence, holding der the Queen, and their the gravest consequences, ath to some and injury to e the future consequences ne no one was yet able to itinuing, _ the Lord Chief , that although they all i the raid the court must between them in the pUD= arded for their guilt. His en gued sentences . Uupon rs. Dr. Jameson WAs SOD: the most i unmoved when the ndered, and Sir Edâ€" . the court‘s disposi« a new trial The retired for consultaâ€" heir absence Sir Edâ€" the defendants con: s tha . vasult: thak in Iron Horse, copman / Rich Strikes Made in and, B. €. strike has been made ying north of St. Elâ€" of the Southern Belle ". The ore runs over F wA