West Grey Digital Newspapers

Grey Review, 22 Oct 1896, p. 6

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| J q ow g O <at #: ()t‘g E& Klotz, astronomer of the â€" $ Dep t of the Interior, has arâ€" #Z rived at Port Stanley, Ont., to estab. * a"lith s# astronomicstation in connection with ‘a geoditic survey. . trouble to # (n} J « . Depdriniecn to no less than ten calls during Satâ€" urday night and Sunday. Two of the fires were of a serious nature. Harvie‘s factory sustained $7,000 damâ€" age ; and Ryrie Bros.‘ jewellery storeâ€" room was scorched to the extent of $1,000. GREAT BRITAIN. Storms and floods did immense damâ€" age in Grest Britain. The Imperial Russian train with the Czar and Czarina on board arrived at Darmstadt on Saturday evening. British crop reports up to October 1 shows that cereals have been damaged by rain, but the roots and grass imâ€" proved. _ _ Phe e sE ons The London Chronicle says that it learns from a good source that the Czar and Lord Salisbury have agreed upon a policy for the ultimate deposition of the Mr. and Mrs. Chamberlain bave arâ€" rived at Birmingham. Another hurricane visited the Briâ€" tish coast on Friday night. The despatch of naval reinforcements to Zanzibar is interpreted as a demonâ€" stration against Germany. Mr. Harry Bryan Reed, Conservative member of Parliament for the eastern division of Bradford is dead. At the St. Thomas light works the main shafting of the incandescent dynâ€" amos fell, damaging the dynamos. The building was considerably da.msfi;d ;ndedtho lighting plant seriously â€" ured. Serious damage by prairie fires is reâ€" gortod in the vlcÂ¥nf’tfia of _ Grenfell, orthport, _ Regina, ttleford, Calâ€" gary and Indian Head. In many inâ€" stances farmers have lost all their Lord Roaeberrfil; has resigned the leadership of the British Liberal party. Crops are reported as ruined in the west of Ireland by recent storms and EoE CEo bmpant . irant. Pentalihi e Pb sns is Auic ced a and an appeal tothe Attorneyâ€"Generâ€" al‘s authority will be made. Col. Warner H. Nelles, one of the oldâ€" est residents of the Niagara peninsula, died on Friday, in his ninetyâ€"eighth i:.:r. He was seventeen years old when battle of Waterloo was fought. A convict in the Kingston penitentiâ€" ary named Hewell, a negro, aged |28, who was serving a life term for crimâ€" inal assault, on Thursday made an atâ€" tack on one of the guards with a pair of scissors, and was shot in the head. He died last evening. The Toronto Fire brigade responded 8Uu The Hospital Committee of the Hamâ€" ilton Council recommends that Judge Bnider be asked to investigate certain dleg:d frauds in the grocery contract of the House of Refuge. The Police Magistrate at Brockville refuses to hold court in the room proâ€" vidjed for that purpose by the Council, Relatives of William Buckingham, a young man who went from London to work on a farm near l}auw Copners, are looking for him. A fortune is said to await him. 1 + The Corn Exchange of Montreal has a resolution in favor of removâ€" an obstruction in the Lachine Caâ€" nal which is causing a great deal of trouble to vessels. The mills, dwellings, and barns at Tracadie, N.S., belonging to the Trapâ€" gint monks have been destroyed by fire. be loss is nearly $40,000, with no inâ€" surance. During aa gale on Wednesday mornâ€" ing a Norwegian barque went on shore at Green Cove, C.B., and the captain it N N A MSHIL and nine of the crew were killed on the rocks or drowned. Mfil«- About Our Own Country, During the absence of the Governorâ€" General Chief Justice Sir Henry Strong will act as administrator. Nearly all the cheese in the vicinity z'l(ingnwn has been bought up by lers at nine to ten cents. The annual report of the Grand Trunk Railway, published in London, shows a net revenue deficiency of £82,000. _ Mr. Samuel Williams, an electric lineman of Hamilton, is lying at St. Joseph‘s Hospital in a very critical condition from a fail. The Montreal Board of Trade object to the date of Thanksgiving Day because the holiday interferes with the naviâ€" gation of the canals at a very busy Mrs. Philip O‘Meara died on Friday at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. M. Ryan, in Ottawa, aged 111 years. _ Mr. Thomas Hanley, Grand Trunk ticket agent for Kingston, died at his residence in that city on Friday, aged fiftyâ€"seven. _ The wheat elevators of Manitoba are filled up as a result of the recent strike but the C.P.R. is now moving grain again freely. The T. H. Taylor Company‘s flour mills at Chatham were badly damâ€" aged by fire. . The Public and High School Boards of Kingston have decided to amalgaâ€" Rod at Ottawa will be abolished before next session. Mr. Louis Cartwright, aged 19,youngâ€" sst son of Sir Richard Cartwright, died yesterday at Lindsay. John Maclean & Co., wholesale milâ€" liners, Montreal, have assigned with liabilities of $175,000 Lord and Lady Aberdeen have gone to Tnd a two months‘ holiday on Lorbh'Aberdoen's ranch in British Colâ€" um The body of Miss Mary Grant, a former member of the Toronto Salvaâ€" tion Army, was found in Kingston Dr. H. P. Wright has been elected g::aident of the Ottawa Medical Soâ€" y. The Northern elevator at Douglass, mml ce mt burned with 15,000 bushels ol wheat. CANADA. . Ottawa‘s population is 51,540, accordâ€" ing to the assessors‘ returns. The season just closed has been @ very poor one ior immigration to Caâ€" The Wentworth Historical Society is locating a site for the erection of a historical museurs. 5 iHE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVER. The Swe‘ish steamer Alexander was It is probable that the office of Black UGreat Britain, the United States, and All Parts of the Globe, Comdensed and assorted for Easy Reading. of Montreal has favor of removâ€" the Lachine Caâ€" a great deal of I wish I was an ostrich, said Hicks, an‘frily. as he.tried to eat one .of his wife‘s biscuits. e I wish you were, dear, returned MÂ¥s. Hicks; I‘d get a few decent fecthers for my winter hbat. mss | * the German people toward Russia are not those stated by the Emperor in his speeches, and that the attentions and honors shown the Czar are unprecedentâ€" ed and more effusive than were â€" ever shown toward Germany‘s ally, Emperâ€" or Francis Joseph o# Austria. The most startling instance was when Emperor William telegraphed recalling the Gerâ€" man fleet of 54 vessels from the North Sea maneuvers, and directed the ahngs to fproceed forthwith to Kiel and parade before the Czar. All sorts of official decorations were granted by the Emâ€" peror to the Russian visitors, and covâ€" ered in their announcement almost a page of the Reichsanzeiger. The newsâ€" papers take especial exception to Emâ€" peror William‘s speech, in which he characterized the Russian army as the most powerful, and they also complain of the fact that the Czar replied to Emâ€" peror William in French, when it is well known that his Russian Majesty speaks German fluently. The nervous twitching of the face of the Czar was noted both at Breslau and at Kiel, and it is said that this is due partly to a nervous affection which recently deâ€" clared itself and partly to a feeling of insegurity, created by the noticeable and extraordinary precautions for his safety which were taken by the Governâ€" It is reported on good authority that Russia has decided to intervene on beâ€" halif of the Armenians, compelling the Porte to carry out the promised reâ€" forms. England and France will supâ€" port the move. Rather Frosty Was the Czar, Considering the Emperor‘s EFfustveness. The unusual manner in which Emâ€" peror William feted and toasted the Czar when the latter was in Germany, and the frigidâ€"tones of the latter‘s reâ€" sponses, have excited universal attenâ€" tion in Germany. Many of the newsâ€" papers point out that the sentiments of The reconciliation of Emperor Wilâ€" liam and his brother Heanv, of Prusâ€" sia is now eifected, and the Prince durâ€" ing the comin% winter will reside in the Royal castle of Kiel. The Kolnische Zeitung asserts that a written treaty of alliance is in existâ€" ence between Russia and France, but that it is only defensive in its proviâ€" sions. At a large public meeting held at Cape Town on Friday evening, resoâ€" lutions were adopted, calling for the abolition of duties, on meat, flour, and wheat. After witnessing a grand review at Chalons and toasting the French army, the Czar accompanied by the Czarina, started for Darmstadt. The Victoria Assembly, after an allâ€" night sitting, passed the second reading. of the bill establishing female suffrage, and one man one vote. The magnificence of the reception of the Czar and Czarina at Paris exceeded anything ever before seen in the French capital. Turkey will not admit the U. S. :lr,uiser fiancroft, through the Dardanâ€" .C8. A number of Mexican vi.l(-i:&es have been washed away by the fl in the State of Sinola. Guayquil, Ecuador, thas been wiped out by fire. A branch of the Siberian railroad is ctg be constructed across Northern Manâ€" uria. Documents and maps found in the archives of the Capuchin Order tend to support the British claim in the Venezuelan dispute. For the past week there has been practically no change in the trade situâ€" ation in the United States. Business in all lines is unprecedently qLuiet, and this week the sudden advent of cold weather has checked the movement in some directions, while it has not bad time enough or been decided enough to develop the winter demand. Orders are restricted to immediate requireâ€" ments, wholesale merchants are critâ€" ical as to credits, and generally colâ€" lections are poor. A slight improvement is reported in Atlanta, Augusta, New Orleans and Texas cities. W heat, wool, iron, and steel have advanced, and are steady at the advances. GENERAL. A Ministerial crisis is reported at Madrid. _ H The report that the Venezuelan bounâ€" dary dispute has been settled is denied in New Qork by Frederick R. Coudert, a member of Liw Venezueian commisâ€" sion. Mr. W. Y. Atkinson (Democrat) has been reâ€"clected Governor of Georgia by a majority of 28,000, which is an inâ€" crease of 6,000 over the party majority of two years ago. Lieut.â€"Col. Desiardin,clark of the Queâ€" bec Legisiative Assembly, in an interâ€" view in Boston, said that he did not think the Canadian people, as a rule, favored annexation with the â€" United States. It is reported at Buffalo that a trafâ€". fic alliance has been made between the Grand Trunk and the Lehigh Valley railroads which will enable the G. T. K. to run through trains from Chicago to New York. sunk in collision with the British steamer Emden in the Humber. Ten of the crew were drowned. The Irish party are greatly dissatlsâ€" fied at the resignation of Lord Roseâ€" borsy_. They do not relish the &:ospwt of Sir William Harcourt being the léadâ€" er of the Liberal party. Sir William Harcourt, in his speech at Ebow Vale on Monday evening, said he did not admire England‘s splendid isolation, and hoped. Lgui she â€" would All departments of the Cambria iron works at Johnstown, Pa., have closed down, affecting 3,000 men. Dr. Carl F. Nitz, a German physician, of Chicago, vivisected his wife on Wedâ€" nesday aftternoon, took notes of her dyâ€" ing condition, and then shot himself _Lord Salisbury, Mr. Chamberlain and Sir Julian Pauncefote had a lonfg cconâ€" ference in the British Foreign Office on Saturday on the Venezuelan question, and it is expected that & settlement of and it is expected that a settlement of the vexed case will soon be arrived at. UNITED STATES. President Cleveland has rmturned to Washington from Gray Gables. â€"_ m an alliance with Russia, which would enable her to control the Sultan. Baron Mueller, the Australian explorâ€" AGREED AT LAST. NOT VERY FRIENDLY. «Mrs. Helen Cody Wetmore, the editor and ?ublishpr of the Duluth Press, a weekly ‘paper, is said to be a sister of "Buffalo Bill." Peddletâ€"This paste removes freckles and tan, cures gout and rheumatism, and besides is an excellent preventiveâ€"" «Mrs. Hicksâ€"Give me a box! It prevent ‘your calling again. The foot is thus evenly baked, and when done, instead of the strong, tough meat, it is of a gelatinous consistency that may be eaten with a spoon. The Kaifirs esteem this their greatest luxâ€" To prepare the joint a hoale three feet deep is dug in the earth, and the sides of it are baked hard by means of large live coals. Most of the coals are then taken out, @and the elephant‘s foot is placed in the crude oven. The whole is then filled with dirt, tightly packed, and a blazing fire is built on tf:’p' which is kept repienished for three ours. part, very strangely, is the first joint of ottxhld? leg beluzv ‘the hk(r,xee; which <one w suppose to be the toughest = tion of the animal. gaes 1P9r The elephant yields large quantities of fat, used in cookiing "biltong," or dried stngs of the elephant‘s flesh, and also in the preparation of vegetablem African explorers agree that one part of the elephant‘s carcass, when propâ€" erly cooked, is a succulent dish that will regale the most delicate taste. This It Is Quite a Delicacy With Several Afriâ€" can Tribes. The flesh of the elephant is eaten in its entirety by several of the African tribes. In the process of butchering the tools used are the assegai and bhatchets. The rough outer skin is first removed in large sheets, and _ beâ€" neath this is & subcuticle, a pliable membrane, from which the natives make water skins. ht 2A auts TB Ads ce ictc ds Aclits c B NB d B + 07045 ut There is a fair volume of trade in wholesale departments _ at Toronto. The colder weather is favorable for heavy goods, and prospects generally are considered satisfactory. Prices of cotton goods are firm at the late adâ€" vances and woolens are atea,d{. The higher prices of wheat and flour are well hefd. although they check busiâ€" ness to some extent. An unfayorable feature is the large number of failures in this province. Profits have been cut pretty fine, through keen comâ€" petition and collections have not been up to general expectations. _ They should improve, however, from this time out. ‘The better prices for many descriptions of farm produce will imâ€" prove the condition of farmers and ultimatelE have a beneficial effect on trade. The export trade in apples has been unusually beavy and prices unâ€" commonly low. Cheese, however, conâ€" tinues to show slight advances, and cured meats are somewhat firmer. The local financial situation shows little change. Prime paper is discounted at 6 to 6 1â€"2 per cent. and call loans on choice atocE collateral are obtainable at 5 per cent. Sterling Exchange is weaker, and New York drafts are inâ€" clined to be lower owing presumably, to the growing uneasiness across the border. Money is firmer in New York and again we hear rumblings of the hoarding of gold. ChHe | EL OGGEGEUG OM P AGMRCCRCTCTA + With regard to general trade , in Montreal there is rather more doing, but in moderate lots, and there is an absence of any heavy buying. In heavy metals and bardware the demand is a little better, and there is some _ atâ€" tempt at getting former prices. Linâ€" seed oil and turpentine are again reâ€" ported stronger, and glass is advanced a point. The sugar market is in rather unsatisfactory sfiape, another _ slight decline having developed since last writing, but in most other lines of groceries there is increasing firmness, notably in both California and Mediâ€" terranean dried fruits. In dry goods bleached sheetings have been added to the list of recent advances in domestic cottons ; some houses report some vyery fair orders already booked for certain lines of (:f)ring goods. The shoe and leaâ€" ther trades remain quiet ; sole leather and splits are held more firmly, prinâ€" cipally due to the good English demand for these lines, but there is no iene;al tendency to advance, although the hide market is t‘airl{ active and somewhat excited. Liberal shipments of butter to Britain are reported for last week with prices fairly maintained, and cheese shows some gain in local values, while cable quotations for late makes are advanced. The money market is without chan%e, call money being readily available at 4 1â€"2 per cent. | The visible supply of wheat in the United States and Canada is 50,116,000 bushels, an increase of 1,401,000 bushâ€" els for the week. A year ago the total was 41,832,000 bushels, and two years ago 73,604 bushels. The amount afloat to Euyrope is 26,400,000 bushels an inâ€" crease of 2,240,000 for the week. A {’)eur ago the total afloat was 23,840,000 ushels. y The Canadian wood pulp _ industry with a rapid growth has attained large proportions. y the census of 1891 tife produce of pulp wood was 261,155 cords, but as it was then recorded for the first time there can be no COM~ parison with the previous decades. Pulp mills did not appear in the census of 1871; by that ofi 1881 the invested ca{» ital amounted to $92,000, the wages to $15,720 and the product to $63,300 ; by the census of 1891 the invested ca%x- tal had increased to $2,900,907, the wages to §$292,099 and the value of the product to $1,056,810. _ | _ _ _ . P Bomq d o2 vada in ast week the shipments of all exâ€" porting countries were 10,000,000°* bushâ€" els of wheat, the largest total for «,me time past. The earnings of Canadian Pacific for the fourth week of September were $509,000 as compared with $588,000 the corresponding week of last year, & deâ€" crease of §$79,000. € s k. The stock of wheat at Toronto 18 145,857 bushels as compared with 124,â€" 288 bushels last week and 15,852 bushâ€" els a year ago. 20 Some Items of Interest to the Busy Business Man. The Toronto money market is steady at 5 per cent. for call loan on choice stock collateral. In 1894 the world‘s production of gold amounted to $179,965,600, of silâ€" :ir $215,404,600. The world‘s stock of lard on October st were 519,574 tierces as against 564,â€" 517 tierces on September 1st. & "HR FIELD OF COMMERCE. AN_EXPERIMENT. ELEPHANT MEAT. tle brown sparrow, chattering shrilly, descended swiftiy to the pavement and pecked at the spider. lInstantly and with the wariness of a crack pugilist the spider leaped to one side and brist!â€" ed with anger and resentment. The sparrow hopped discreetly to one side. It was evident that the bird would have a hot fight before it got its quarry, if it got it at all. A moment or two latâ€" er the sparrow with fluttering wings and wideâ€"open mouth, flew at the spidâ€" er. A short, sharp tussle followed, and when the sparrow hopped back to g'et its second wind, it was seen that the spider, though somewhat disabled, was by no means vanquished. . Itâ€"stood its fround gamel y, waiting like some prize iqhter or time to be called. Eventuâ€" ally the bird seized â€"the spider in its bill and flew to a bough of the nearest tree. It was a hardâ€"fought and wellâ€"earned victory, and the sparrow seemed proud of what it had donk. Me Wins a HMardâ€"Fougzht Victory Against a Spider. A number of people witnessed aâ€"curiâ€" ous and savagely fought combat in front of St. Paul‘s P.E. Church, Troy, N. Y., the other morning. A large black spider emerged into a crevice under the steps of the church and started across the sidewalk toward the gutter. Before it had traversed half the distance a litâ€" Bizaio, whose character is notoriously bad, disappeared at the time of the inâ€" quest, and has not been heard of since. It is understood that he is in hiding in the woods mnorth of the lake, and it is expected that the advent of the cold weaâ€" ther will drive him out, as it will be almost impossible for him to subsist wit hout {)rovisions and far from civiliâ€" zation. It is deemed likely that he may soon come within reach of arrest, and the offering of a reward will probably assist in effecting his capture. The matâ€" ter is ander consideration by the Atâ€" torneyâ€"General‘s Department at the preâ€" sent time, and it is understood that steps will be immediately taken to effect by this means the apprehension of the fugitive. h8 + An Indian‘s Crimeâ€"Coromer‘s Verdict of Murderâ€"A Reward to be Offered by the Government. The Ontario Gove nment will, it is exâ€" pected issue a rew: rd for the capture of an Indian named Joseph Bizaio, who is charged with the murder of another Indian, named Megwance, at Thessalon, the north shore opposite Manitoulin Island, on August 29th, last. As far as is known by the evidence in the hands of the authorities, the two men became involved in a quarrel, and Bizaio struck Megwance with an oar. The injured man lingered for some days, and then died, and an inquest was held at Thesâ€" salon by the coroner of the district, at which two men testified to having witâ€" nessed the occurrence. As a result, a verdict of wil{ful murder was returned against Bizaio, and on September 7th. last a letter was received by the Attorâ€". neyâ€"General Department from â€" lthe: County Attorney of the locality, stating the facts, and asking for instructions. A warrant was promptlly issued for the arâ€" rest of the accused man, but f@ll atâ€" tempts to catch him have so far proved fruitless, the character of the surroundâ€" ing country offering almost perfect opâ€" plox'tunities for hiding to a man of his class. a en up, and the inhabitants driven inâ€" land. In many parts the sea runs up on a beach which was once far inland. In other cases, churches which were at one time situated far from the sea now stand at the edge of the cliffs, and have the sea lapping almost at their doors. The Goodwin Sands, about five miles off the coast of Kent, were at one time & poriion of the mainland itseif, and the property of Earl Goodwin. The coast of Norfolk is minus three villages of which it was once possessed â€"Shipden, Eccles and Wimpwellâ€"all of which have been taken into the arms of the encroaching ocean. â€" The Cromer of toâ€"day stands miles inland of the origiâ€" nal Cromer. Auburn and Harlburn, two Yorkshire villages, once promised to develop into seaport towns of considerable importâ€" ance, but, like the will of Canute, the will of the inhabitants of these villages was ignored by the rising sea, and Auâ€" burn and _ Harlburn now exist in mere names and sandbanks. e We i o‘ Dunwich, on the coast of Suffolk, is gradually being swallowed up, . Every now and then the inhabitants move & distance inland, rebuild their houses and shops, and wait patiently and philosoâ€" frhu-a.llg for the mext ‘notice to quit rom the sea, Many‘other seaside places hl:rvef suifered, or are suffering, a simiâ€" ate. + But the extension of our island in this way is very much less than the encroachment of the sea at other F:mfl. and while our land is certainly becomâ€" ing more extensive in one direction, it is contracting, and with much greater rapidity, in some other,. And the ultiâ€" mate may be that our mountain peaks may form small islands, and eventually be pointed out by posterity as "the poâ€" sition in which Great Britain is reputed to have stood." It may be argued on the other hand that some seaside towns are gradually becoming iniand towns by the failure of the sea to "come up to the mark," and running out only to run in for a shorter distance. Winchelsea, â€" Sandâ€" wich, Rye and Southport are all sufferâ€" ing in this way. Winchelsea and Rye were originally two of our Cinque Ports, but the sea has left them standing high and dry. Sandwich was once a highly important seaport town; it now stands two or three miles inland. 3 B The sea is leaving Southport quite in the lurch; so much so, indeed, that the inhabitants have had to sink extensive lakes down on the benck to keep the sea running off altogether and leaving them merely an ordinary inland town. A Writer Avers That the Sea Is Gradually Immersing It. iA writer in an English journal tries to show that the sea is fast encroachâ€" ing upon the British Isle, and that in the course of time England will be marked on the map as a vanished land. On the east coast, the sea is _ @NDâ€" croaching upon the land at an astonâ€" ishing rate. Seaside towns and villages, boliday resorts, are gradually being eatâ€" THE PUGNACIOUS SPARROW. A FUGITIVE FROM JUSTICE. ENGLAND VANISHING. Don‘t worry, dear, Nobody will ever scall you that. I don‘t mind riding the bicycle and wearing the costume, but I should hate to be called a wheelwoman. as the gases pass away through a numâ€" ber of smali holes just over the hottest part of the fire, they are necessarily completely consumed in passing the red hot brickwork. The open door of the furnace is sufficiently large to admit of a mattressâ€"prubably the largest article that will ever need to be put into itâ€" wit hout cutt.inr%or unnecessary handâ€" ling of it. The heat thus generated proâ€" vides a constant sugP:-y of hot water, or maintains the ues hbeating the wards at a proper temferatune guring any particular g:.rt of the day when other means of heating can be dispensâ€" ed with, and an economy of fuel is thus effected. Circumstances alter cases, says the proverb, and sometimes the metamorâ€" suddenness. A A third party was approaching from the opposite direction, with fury in his eye and a club in his hand. Which of you two rascals shot my calf? roared the farmer. ‘ _ That fellow just told me he did it, said A. k And B,; now :thoroughly alarmed for his personal _ safety, answered : He lies. He shot it himwlf. I saw him do it, and I‘ll swear to it. However opinions may be divided as to the utility of refuse destructors as an auxiliary source of power, there can be no question at all as to their absolute necessity, from a sanitary point of view. There is one class of refuse so dangerâ€" ous that it cannot be carted even to the municipal destructor without risk to the public, and especially to the emâ€" ployes. This class includes infected clothing, bedding and other dangerous materials that give rise to a constant risk of a complication of infectious disâ€" eases. These things can only be renderâ€" ed harmless by fire, and should on no account be taken away from the hosâ€" pitals. To meet this necessity a deâ€" structor for hospital use has been deâ€" signed on a somewhat smaller scale than the ordinary destructor. Two amateur hunters in the northern woods, not long ago, saw a deer, and both fired at once. That is my deer, said A, I shot it. No, you didn‘t, hotly replied B. It is ny deer, because I killed it. A forced drau{ljn secures the rapid destruction at a high temperature of whazeveir is put into the furnace, and Mode of Destruction in Modern Hospitals. The deer-stallkinÂ¥ season has been immensely successful. The Bradleyâ€" Martins party of thirteen rifles at Balâ€" macan last week secured 49 stags, one day‘s drive securing nine. The earl of Craven i{)t a couple of imperials,', and James R. Roosevelt, secretary o‘ the United States Embassy, secured a handsome nineâ€"pointer. Three of the AngloAmerican Comâ€" pany‘s storage oil tanks on the railway near Huddersfield caught fire on Satâ€" urday. There were two terrible explo sions, and all traffie was stopped for many hours. Each of the tanks held 2,000 gallons of oil. : j INFECTED CLOTHING AND BEDDING William Heury Parnell, third Baron Congleton, is dead. He was born in iISOS), and was formerly in the Royal avy. ol uptees muntt l Y 4e The Queen and the Pope have exâ€" changed cordial leiters upon the occaâ€" sion of the 60th anniversary of her Majesty‘s reign. The Pope, after conâ€" gratulating her, and sending his best wishes, thanked the Queen in grateful terms for the freedom of worship enâ€" joyed by Roman Catholics thrm(x)%hout the British Empire. The reply her Majesty was most cordial. She deâ€" clared hersel{ happy to trepeat her former assurances of the perfect freeâ€" dom of Catholics within her dominion, and added that it was her pleasinfi duty to acknowledge their fidelity an loyalty. _ Aopainte s wae on c NOAE C _How great a gap George DuMauâ€" rier‘s death leaves in English art is suggested by the fact that he is sucâ€" ceeded on l{mch by _ Phil May. Du Maurier was England‘s society a@rtist, always following the _ advice _ Mark Lemon gave him on joining _ RPunch: ‘"Don‘t do funny things; do the fimw fui side of life; be the tenor in Punch bouffe." _ Phil May is the clown in opera bouife, ‘The American furore over Trilby was probably the greatest marvel of his life to DuMaurier himâ€" self, and Englishmen are sad to think that Trilby killed him, bringing society claims â€" upon his time and strength which he was not able to stand. £ The engagement of â€" Coningsby Disâ€" raeli,, nephew of the jlate Benjamin Disraeli, (Lord Beacons{lield) to a.{oun_g Portuguese lady of immense wealth, is announced. _ The strike among the cab drivers against the special privileges accorded certain drivers at the railway stations is increasing. The Cab Drivers‘ Union will call out 1,000 more men on Monâ€" day. The use of cabs in the city is generally declining, owing to the fact that business men are more and more using the telephones instead of driving around to the various offices as has heretofore been the custom. There is hardly a chance of the cabmen winâ€" ning the fight. Ja M t > The London Road Car Company, which runs 950 omnibuses, intends eventually to do away with the use of horses in its business, and to run motor omnibuses. A â€" hundred of these vehicles will be, placed on the streets in November, and 800 more in Januâ€" An Artist‘s Fortuneâ€"Motor Omnibuses for London Streetsâ€"Cab Drivers‘ Strikeâ€" The Queen and the Popeâ€"Two Terrible Explosionsâ€"Deer Stalking. A despatch from London, says:â€"The Archbishop of Canterbury was seized with apoplexy after the services comâ€" menced at Hawarden church, on Sunâ€" day morning. â€" He was carried to the Hawarden rectory, where he died at 11.80 o‘clock. The late Sir John Millais, president of the Royal Academy, left a fortune of $1,250,000. THE DEATH OF THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. sOME LATE CABLE NEWS SHE‘LL NEVER WIN THE TITLE. ANOTHER MATTER Dhusty Rodesâ€"I did the railroad great service toâ€"day. % d‘Weary Walher-;-Swpped a train at n us a DEu-ty fi:â€"xo. 1 signaled ;o U engineer that there was a man on ! track and he slowed up. Weary Walkerâ€"Who was the 4* ed,. If the _ establishment su branches will then be opened in districts, and a new departure permanent. Every day it was confidenty © ed that the brother wou‘ld be from, but every eventide saw ! ceipt of tidings. One or two sible friends were ferreed out, hu! .Thfi remains were kept for five w& and as no friends (u the 1 sad duties to the dead on the shoulders of strangers the fact that for two weeks the of this unknown man was the of conversation all over Ame: so far the means adopted to cor identity have been success‘u went down into the grave as "H of New York." An enterprising woman of New is arranging for the establishn» a place where women can have shoes polished. Her idea is to = small place upâ€"town where wonk .te(f in at any time during th« and for 10c have their footgear ad If thoa â€" e«tahlishment SUC mo one came forward to shed brotherly tear over the life and see it _ reverently consy earth. , in the meantime the lifel were thorough‘ly embalmed Stone, and by gai&y preseryv. ment between then and now has been kept in a most li{ This brocher was immediat and after some days‘ delay : was received that he was but would possibly be home In a number of cases the corp» almost identified, First he was a ated with a missing man named ers from Chicago, then Wanser o aca, then a Brooklyn man was th« to be the right one, and Tin«a/y, much t.heonzm(fi and doubt, it w most conclusively settled (thaw hb a Cornell student by the n=ums 0o haan, and had a bro her a projes: the Jobhns Hopkins University in tunmore, Md. name "H. Nanta, New Yorkh * He reâ€" tired to his room, and at eleven o‘clock next morning was found dead in his bed. Every evidence pointed to suicide, and an inquut was theld. Nothing new was brought out by the holdiog of the enquiry, and the jury returnâ€" ed a verdict of death selfâ€"inflicued But by many the name "H. Nanis" was thought to be fictitious, and there fore the corpse was taken to W. H. Stone‘s undertaking establishmunt, and the police were set to work on the (ask of finding out if possible who the dead man was. The fact of his death was widely advertised by the pross, and very soon enquiries came to InspeciUt Stark from all parts of America from the relatives of men who were m A Sulcide at Toronto Interred Under Bb Assumed Name. On the night of September 22nd last a respectably dressed man wnulked into the Queen‘s hotel, Toronto, stepped to the register, and inscribed thereoan the Policeman Roberts, who was mortally wounded in the tragedy on Weinesday afternoon in which James Whive and two policemen were killed, died on Thursday morning. Henry White, a you.nfnfon of James White, who escap ed while his father was barricaded in bis home, has been captured and se retly removed from the county goal to prevent lynching. The news of the affair created in tense excitement. . Policeman Rolery went to White‘s house, knocked, was asked in, and as he stepped insile was fatally wounded by a baill from W hites gun. The entire police force, arme with Winchesters, and augmented by the presence of a large number of armed citizens went lo arrest the Whites. ‘The son had taken no part in the last shooting. The Whites‘ house was surrounded and gemands made for surrender. The replge\\'as a shot, which wounded a boy in the crowd. Then six officers went to the house and broke down the toors. As they sprang in White fired, wounding Sergeant Lick ett, At the same time White was shot. He attempted to break through, but a dozen bullets were put through his body, Henry, the son, escaped to the Alabaâ€" ma sde of the river. A posse with bloodbhounds is on his trail. "I told you to get ready, and if you are not ready you ought to be," Whit called out, as be opened fire on the of. ficers, Adams and Jackson. Adams fell at the first shot, then Jackson fell, begging the Whites to slop firing, The father stood over bim firing into his prostrate body. _ _ to a charge of disorderly Cuuduu.â€"'j'h: maddened White, who made threatg against the officers. He went home, got his Winchester, and bought a sup ply of cartridges. He was joined by his son, who was also armed. They went to a barâ€"room, and going out {rom there encountered the officers. his nineteenâ€"yearâ€"old boy murdere, eold blood two policemen and wour two other men who were in the )x attempting to @rrest them. The n dered officers are Richard Adams, Wm. Jackson. White was former} policeman, but for several years has | in the shoe business. He has been 4 sidered eccentric, but not crazy, W nesday he became involved in a qua in a barâ€"room, and Adams and Jacl served him with a summons to ans Dhusty Rodesâ€"I was. Quarrel Between Father and sop and q Number of Policemenâ€"Fouyp Men Deag and Two Serlously Woundeqg, A special from Columbus, Ga., says : Three meh are dead and two seriougly wounded as the result of a sensation. al tragedy which shook Columbus to its foundation on Wednesday, One of the dead is J. A. White, who was the cause of the whole trouble. White and POLISHING WOMEXN‘S sHOLS HIS GREAT SERVICE SENSATIONAL TRAGEpy BURIED AS H. NANTA. C) Sprang In sergeant l‘ick» hite was shot. bhrough, but a ough his body, to the Alabeâ€" A posse with il. â€" was mortally **5 Vocn ©op» Crazy. Weq. 1 in a quarrg s and Jacksop us to answer conduct. Th made lhm railroad n dered in n olD o the Jundeg Party day eanâ€" ed$ , and de Ho AB ol ed lay, __C 4A vote to ever,\‘- w “”fi years of age h. M aiine 0 domestic ainc tases out of 29 wives voted â€" N. Or ratbher, he said & the ladieg present, hush; n“r wives, Daughter Foted as their fathars often for the same ca; ‘"° Hon,. W . Reeves, J r h 'e' kala iÂ¥d, in a ‘w thl t the pas Certainly Tainly in u..h" ‘lllo' i bott1 r! 'h.::::‘ te‘:‘ifl. J ap ‘Just tell Wnn + _‘ nat and left w h‘aafll. ana the im;»« % of bricâ€"aâ€"brac ;‘. Sitinn, 128 to lose one of ; sitiong £28_t9 lose sitiong I ever h: Wyorblain my er :%' ..J‘:le them i i t an« t?.;‘..}a“l. ana th. h“l TTune i nad set the on ‘-h uble "l(h 3r¢-.1 as the gentlieman came into Then came the shock. dat fry apited_any t . . not. t he ha« miserable bottle up with on oâ€"box arrangements w)h ‘h.ll whenever it is picked 1 hh.m'.". Tunt as I ol Did he tr No. It w pimg > Iily :’lht t= on !'.‘l':"hlide | bighly artist hardâ€"hearted and uncharitat my career, said the man wit by silk hat ; but about the 1 men I ever came across was d on this afternoon. He â€" tised for a gentleman of 1 :.I‘nlut.llet: act in a cleric h_“_I- e 'lthuhousa LC 220y artistic pattern, 1 m is to examine them." You were ?llite alone t a.(i,.",!' had set the /0 ie treat you rudely No. It was his silent 5. wounded me. The servan: into his library, and, whi my glance happened to rcs canter on the sideboard. Elass beside it, and, as boil shut himse® up and see yond; but to the man wh there is in agriculture ple look. These thoughts are & the really firstâ€"class exhibit stallions seen at a parish Jlasgow within the past Many of the farmers in t have found it pmfiui;v J M yo or them 5“]?‘“!12!‘%3. an sell for city work. To farm ed of the %ui-ibe skill, w from 150 to 250 acres, the pré rived is an imgormm add venue, and guch have fa}t M? the effect of the dim fits following on the exoes tation of cheap horses from : is likely to be a temporary the gelding trade is still a â€" erous osamngl for exerci ents and abiuties. To the determined to be circums ideas and aims, agriculiu close corporation. . Such shut himself up and see yond; but to the man wh there is in agriculture ple ’a}" maused by bacteria 3 Mufl“m the milking if | stronger the lon Slamds. On the other hX uced by the food_ eaten pronounced immediately & s bacteria are living or on temperature of the m velopment and cold ret: IRCC" 224 immadia the sudden &u uy % 2 velopment and cold reta the sudden and immedia: the milk checks the activil teria, The aeration, the the milk to the air, allon ;Lth foreign odors to a most pg'wtlca.l methe fiiulilll this is where a thin ows over & surface coole water or ce and water, 1 that use running water through in a direction opf of the milk, & that the and t?‘gofdest waler ar _ mm cnnthame 1A PDEMAND FOR GOOD DR There is clw?s deman draft borses, and farmers ~ourage and energy to r the profit. Scotch farm been discouraged by the cheap American horses, 1 cured the very best sires best heary draft geldings and are above all foreign and they are on the look horses to mature at a FoG does no good to sit down al They meet the competit4 prices with a better clus* The Scotlish Farmer says affords to the open-minng e PM C and the coldest walor ari tom of the :fl»a:ratus. W water are us it is nece it up once in a while, & next to the surface over milk flows hbecomes Ward INTERRUPTED I‘ve jolted up against a _ CHCrE. '-flollgh in the 1-1 hu speak so confiden: 1 & has been i~scru a'""‘* and licpn: ! front, and »1dâ€" wareueaing Lrom yuili. would not }» e * s p an atmasphere 11 It is also true that I" _ houla not ha‘ m *".., p Sme eke ,l}m life, of milk the mo * * ‘np, bacteris w s l 26""+ this time, _ where TBE OLD aras i. eaten milk, eÂ¥ P‘Al rREPC the m comIin£ the landic s so much . While it satisfactio the odors . milk favo Coexisting ~€ Aeg t i. eaten. errand mMil . and it by the Al from piayi W p‘l

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