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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-03-04, Page 7i 1 1 HAMILTON GIRL MPRBEREB CONDENSED NEWS ITEMS 11.11'1'1:NINES t'llo)t ALL 01E:11 Five Bullets Were Fired Into Miss Ethel THE t;LOIiE:. Kinrade's Head and Breast. A despatch from Hamilton says: who did the murder was furnisheu about 3.45 o'clock on Thursday to the members of the force, who afternoon one of tho most daring, radiated to all parts of the. city,. They devoted their energies parti- cularly to the western part in which the tragedy took place, and kept a close watch on all the railway depots. 1)I:LCRIPT'ON OF THI? MUR- D':RI:R. Ono of the mast remarkable fea- tures about the tragedy is the fact that a man has been hanging aboutel, is dead. that neighborhood for several days' past, and ho is believed to be the A conference to discuss recipro- murderer. The following descrip- city n ith Canada will bo held in tiou of the man who did the shoot 1,otroit in April. ing has been fat nishcxl the police Mr. J W. Tyrrell believes that by Miss Florence Kinrado, and is all the polico havo to guide them in their search: - Age about 35 years, height about cold-blooded and wanton usurdors that c bla:koned the crim- inal . this country was ntmitt t tho home of T. L. Isinradc, 105 Herkimer street. His second daughter, Miss Ethel, is ly- ing at. the ntc.r.gue with five bullet holes in her head and breast, while her murderer has, so far, eluded the police. The murderer is sup- posed to bo a. tramp. Ife went to the house at the hour mentioned while only Miss Florence and Miss Ethel were at h•)me, and in re- sponse to his knock Miss Florence answered. Ho said he wanted something to oat and was invited in, after which ho demanded mores.. Ile was given what Miss Florence could secure in the house, after which he shot Miss Ethel, who was about to leave the house in hor fright, five times and escaped from the dining -room window. Tho police were notified about fifteen minutes after the shooting took place and were on the scene with- in less than half an hour. Chief Snaith had Inspector Mc- Mahon, Detective Bleakley, Sayer and Coulter and some policemen quickly on the scene, and shortly after a fair description of the man Tcleereplile Briefs From Otte Olru anal Other Countries 01 Recent Events. CANADA. The Kingston Board of Health will enforce compulsory vacciva- ation. A now cavalry regiment is to be organized in Braut county. Tho cost of Winnipeg's high pres- sure water system is to be investi- gated. Mayor Thorne of Woodstock, N. 13., editor of The Carleton Sentin- Fort Churchill on the Hudson Bay will be a great seaport. Tho Canadian Pacific having ac- quired the Tilsonburg, Lake Erio five feet wren or eight inches;1 d Pacific Line, are asking power pretty stout.; medium dark cum- te extend it from Ingersoll to Col- ploxion; long, wavy, dark -brown hngwood. moustache, drooping over mouth; John Dubois, contractor on the wore a dark suit and dark over- National Transcontinental near coat; a black slouch hat, pulled 1 rederscton, N. B., has horned his down over the eyes. books and disappeared, owing $6,- This has been placed in tho hands 000. of all the members of the force, A report comes from Victoria, and hope is entertained that tho B C,, that the Sikhs there have murderer will not be long at large, an association that is collecting as word has been sent to the po- money to buy arms for the disaf- lice at all outside points within a feeted natives of India. radius of several miles. WORK FOR UNEMPLOYED filled out of a population of 2,040,- 123, in Frankfort-ou-Mwift . ble19O out of a population of 489,413, and in Dusseldorf 27,301 out of a popu- lation of 25.1,099. The figures in- dicate that the exchanges are largo- ly used, and that they have won the confidence of both employer and workman. Their usefulness is in- creased by the system of co-ordina- tion which obtains in somo of the German provinces, for by this means they assist in the mobility of labor. The investigation of the commis- sioners led them to the following conclusions: FINDING OF COMMISSION... (1) That notwithstanding protec- tive tariffs there exists in Germany a large amount of unemployment, though in the places visited the actual numbers of the unemployed and the degree of poverty experi- enced appeared to have been pre- vented from reaching the same acute stage as obtains in towns of sim- ENGLAND HAS LITTLE TO LEARN IN GERMANY. Labor Exchanges Help to Mitigate Evil -Are Not Complete Success. A report of an enquiry into the tnethods adopted in Germany for dealing with unemployment has been presented to the British Labor party by Mr. George N. Barnes, M.P. The enquiry had special ro- fereuce to insurance and labor ex- changes. The commissioners found gthat there was little to learn„ even in Germay, as regards the practical application of insurance to unem- ployment. Tho matter has not yet `->iPleen taken up by the Imperial au- • thorrties, excepttrq ut so tar aa ago, collection and tabulation of I ilar size in Great Britain, owing to statistics bearing upon it, may be the following, among; other, rea- deseribed. But it was found that there was a very considerable in- sons : iciest being taken in the question, (a) The coordination and system - and that three of the five towns otic management of public labor visited had schemes in operation. exchanges, which admits employers and workmen L1ero easily to ascer- tain the actual condition of the labor market, and tends to lessen the number of Leese unemployed. (h) The desire of municipal au- thorities and many employers to minimize unemployment by regular- izing their requirements. (c:) The greater facilities possess- ed by the German municipalities to cope with uno:oployment in their respective areas, owing to their freedom from the restriction impos- ed by centralized authority. (t) That inesnnich as the German schemes of insurance for unem- ployment are only in the ext,erimen- tal stage, and having regard to their obvious limitations, now e:•!i- not be recommended for adoption in (Great Britain with much con- fidence. LABOR EXCHANGES. .... Of public labor exchanges there are in Germany about 400, and the number is increasing. As to their utility, the report of the cotnntis- sioners states, there are; of course, differences of opinion. There are those who regard them as the first and indispensable step to the further dealing with the problem of unemployment, inasmuch as there- by the actual condition of the labor market maybe ascertained. There arc those who regard labor ex- •cbanges as in themselves providing ra rernedv for unemployment by plac- ing labor where it is wanted, and whore it could not otherwieso have been placed. FINDING THEM WORK. „ The report for August of Sir -.Francis Oppenheimer, Counsul- Cleneral at Frankfurt, showed that Lola --"Last night young Borem .in thirteen towns workers were declared ho would willingly go to sound for more than 10,000 vaean- the end of the earth for me." ivies, and in eight smaller towns (;race -"And what did you say l" z•acnncirs were filled in numbers Lola. -"i finally got him to stake winging from A.000 to 10.000. In r. start for home, and let it go at ink 'Berlin 107,3',6 vacancies ' been that!" ---- - FIFE SETENCE FOR !4AO? Was Found Guilty of Attempted Murder at Simcoe. 1 despatch from Simcoo, Ont.. a trial that has interested half tie aLys: Archibald W. Malone, ex- Dominion; in which thirty-four wit - Chief of Police of ;:lis town. was nesses were summoned by the sentenced on Wednesday night by Crown and none for the defence, Chief Justice Sir William Mulock and in which Mr. George Tate to imprisonment fuer life in King- iilackstock, R. C., Crown I'rose- eton Penitentiary, at the condo- rigor, made an address to the jury lion of a trial whish lasted thirty lasting two and one-half hours, se hours. spread ever three days. in powerful and so unanswerable that which ono of the strangest stories the gloom on the face of the pris of secret crime ever heard in the oner and h's young wife spread annals of Canadian criminology through the whole crowded court was revealed. The jury brought in room. The tension came to an end a set -diet of guilty. The charge when, in low tones, his Lordship which they considered was that in pronounced sentence. l.a::t 1)ecem- the early minutes of December 1. ber, at the trial for Malone's cosn- ioos, Malone, as chief constable, in mitral the crowd then present cokl blood shot and left for dead cheered when the Magistrate ruled his assistant, Constable William against the accused. On Wednes- •Wilkins, the man when]. through day night only an empty silenee Cs eakness of will, he had made possessed the room. Men spoke an ac•cemplice in a series of his rob- quietly. With ee.vcrt inevemeets beri's and incendiary outrages in women placed handkerchiefs to the town. Thus came to an end their e}cs. rIE WORLD'S MARKETS REPORTS FROM TIIE LEADING TRADE CENTRES. lir le03 of Cattle, Grain, Cheese and Other Dairy P:oduco at Howe uud Abroad. BItEADSTUFFS. Toronto, Mar. 2. -Flour -Ontario wheat 90 per cent. patents, $3.. - to $4 to -day in buyers' sacks out- side for export. Manitoba Hour, first patents, $5.70 to $5.80 on track, Toronto; second pateuts, $5.20 to 65.30, and strong bakers', $5 to $5.10. Wheatr-Manitoba wheat, $1.19 fur No. 1 Northern, and $1.16% for No. 2 Northern, Georgian Bay ports. No. 1 Northoru nominal, $1.25'/.,, all rail, and No. 2 North- ern, $1.20%, all rail. Oats -Ontario No. 2 white, 48 to 48%e on track, Toronto • No. 2 Western Canada oats, 48c, Coiling - wood, and No. 3, 470, Collingwood. Peas -No. 2, 90c outside. Corn -No. 2 American yellow, 73c on track, Toronto, and No. 3 yellow, 72c, Toronto. Canadian corn, 68 to 69c, on track, Toronto. Bran -Cars are $22 to $23 in bulk outside. Shorts, $23 in bulk outside. COUNTRY PRODUCE. Apples -$4 to $4.50 for choice qualities, and $3.50 to $4 for cook- ing purposes. Beans -Prime, $1.90 to $2, and The Government will declare bandicked $2.10 to $2.15 per Hecate Straits a closed sea, and •bushel place an armed oruiscr there to Honey -Combs, $2.25 to $2.75 per protect the halibut fishing from dozen, and strained, 11 to 11%c United States poachers. Charles Hodgson fell down an per pound. 1 timothy, $10.75 to elevator shaft at Perrin's confec- $I1 per ton on track here, and tionory at London, Ont.., and, land ing on a pile of paper, escaped with lower grades $9 to 810 a ton. a dislocated finger. Straw -$6.50 to $7.50 on track. GREAT BRITAIN. J. T. Dawson, fornierly of Mont- real. shot his wife and then com- mitted suicide in London. The Vanguard. Britain's seventh vessel of the Dreadnought type, was launched at Barrow on Mon- day. Twenty-eight women, many of thein members of prominent fami- lies, were given terms in prison for rioting in Westminster on Thursday. UNITED STATES. Franklin MacVeagh of Chicago will be Secretary of the Treasury in the TaftCabinet. WAR SEEMS INEVITABLE Austria Likely to Move Against Servia Within Next Fortnight. A despatch from London says : penditure represents a baud'n that Tho Tines of Wednesday morning cannot he borne indefinitely. publishes despatches from Vienna, The public and the authorities St. Petersburg and Berlin taking are well aware that war would in- ti gloomy View of the Austria -Ser- . crease the expenditures ten -fold, viae situation. The Vienna corre- , but both desire the clearing up of spondent says preparations for the situation, preferably by ami - eventual hostilities are naturally cable arrangements and agreement, being completed in Austria -Hun- or, failing that, by a passage at gary. It would, nevertheless, be arms, which, it is hoped, would premature to regard war as cer- open up a prospect of quiet. in the tain, and it. may be asserted with future. How far events would bear confidence that the nearer the pos- sibility os- out the expectation should the con - pears of an armed conflict ap- Ilict conic is a question which ox - this country that it may bo avoid- Times, in a grave leader proposes od. Tho Austro-Hungarian snili- that as normal diplomatic methods tary preparations are estimated to have now broken down, a confer - be costing £40,000 a day. This ex- ence of the powers be summoned. feeding steers, about 1,000 pounds, sold at $4.65. Sheep and lambs - Steady and unchange{. Hogs-Bo- loct were quoted at $6.55 f.o.b., and $6.70, fed and watered. Calves -Steady Band unchanged. ,t. A TUNNEL AT QUEBEC. Hr. Armstrong's Scheme to Solve Croastng Question. A despatch from Montreal says: At Wednesday's meeting of the Board of Trado Council, Mr. J. S. Armstrong of St. John, N. B., pre- sented a scheme which he claims will solve the Quebec bridge ques- tion. He proposes a tunnel in the form of an immense steel tube, cov- ered with cement and kept down in place by piers. He states that in a measure it would resemble tho Potatoes -62 to 65c per bag on tunnel at Port Huron. His plan track. provides for a tubo largo enough Poultry -Chickens, dressed, 12 to to give four lines of rails and two 14c per pound; fowl, 10 to 11c; ducks, 1.1 to 15c; goose, 12 to 13c; turkeys, 17 to 19c per pound. THE DAIRY MARKETS. Buttor-Pound prints, 21 to 22c; driveways for passengers. Ho es- timates that the cost would be less than the bridge, while the results would be far more satisfactory. It would be placed forty feet under water, and would thus bo out of tubs andlarge rolls, 19 to 20c; in- the sway of tho deepest draught vessels. His scheme has aroused ferior, 16 to 17c; creamery rolls, a good deal of comment, and will 26c, and solids, 25c. likely be seriously considered. Eggs -Case lots of cold storage, 24c; selects, 25c, and now laid, 270 per dozen. LEFT 7'HI: PENITENTIARY. Cheese -Largo cheese, 13'/3c per pound, and twins, 14c. Two Prisoners Made Their Escape at New Westminster. HOG PRODUCTS. A despatch from Vancouver says: A Brooklyn man has invented a Bacon -Long clear, 11% to 111/,c A daring and sensational escape fog 'phone which will prevent col- per pound in cast. lots; mess pork, < %vas made from the penitentiary at lisions between ships in a fog. $20 to $20.50; short. cut, $23 to $24. New Westminster on Wednesday An insane W01117111 made her way Ilanis-Light to medium, 13% to morning, the fugitives being a into tho City Hall at Philadelphia 14c do., heavy, 12% to 13c; rolls, French-Canadian named Labour - and threatened to kill the Mayoris 10to lac; shoulders, 10 to 10%c; dette and a Britisher named Stan - unless he paid her faro to Buffalo. hacks, 16 to 16%c; breakfast ba- ton, both of whom were serving a con, 15% to 16e. terns for burglary. Tho escape ap- Laard-Tierces, 12%c; tubs, 13c; pear toh b ed with pails, 13%c. Senator Carter of Montana is working to have the Canadian waterways treaty pushed through the United States Senate at the present session. BUSINESS AT MONTREAL. Montreal, Mar. 2. -Peas - No. GENERAL. 97% to 98c. Oats --Canadian Tho Revolutionary wing of the .Western No. 2, 50% W 51c; extra Russian Socialist party has decided to discontinue preaching openly against the throne. THE ANNUITIES ACT. l'rovisi,on for Riglsts of Holders In ('ase of Marriage. No. 1 feed, 50 to 503 c ; No. 1 feed, 49% to 50c; Ontario No. 2. 49 to 49%e; Ontario No. 3, 48%c to 49c; Ontario No. 4, 47% to 48e; No. 2 barley, 63% to 68c; Manitoba feed barley, 56 to 56'%c; buckwheat, 55% to 56c'. Manitoba Spring wheat patents, firsts, $5.80 to $5.• 90; Manitoba Spring wheat pato A despatch from Ottawa says: ants, seconds, $5.30 to $5.40; Ma - In the Senate on Thursday after - $5.20; strong bakers', $5.10 to noon Sir Richard Cartwright $5.20; Vrint.er wheat patents, $5.40 moved several amendments to the Annuities Act. One amendment provides that a man and woman, each of whom have taken out annui- ties, may each continue to have the right to annuity up to $600 should they marry. Ant -their provision will allow a husband to share his annuity with his wife. Another provision will allow persons having bought annuities in class "B," where payments end with death, to contract himself out of his agree- ment with the Government and !.ave refunded 1 1 .�t the amount Maid in. To Ist• r Lougheed tier Richard said tt, , indications were that the. public were going to avail t',emeelves largely of the oppor- tunities afforded them by the An- eeities Act. PROFITS ONLY $Iy,500,0l10. Johanne.bnrg Mining Co. a Pay- ing ay ing Nowa/lion. A despatch from Johannesburg says::1t a meeting of the Premier Mining C onspany the chairman an- nounced that the profits made thus far amounted to $11,500,000. He added that sales daring the past sear had been well maintained. 1{111 l'1�:1 FINIAL l'1'r.11. FOB 1' 1N 11).1 Nearly t. ai:Iri3Oon Came .ttr:es t'Iantic in I')c)'. to $5.50; straight rollers, $5 to $5.10; do., in bags, 12.35 to $2.45; extra in bags, $1.95 to $2.05. Feed --Manitoba bran, $22; do., shorts, 624; Ontario bran, $23 to *24; do., shorts, $21.50 to $25; Ontario mid- dlings, $25 to $25.50; pure grain mouille, 628 to $30; mixed mouille, •$25 to $27. Cheese ---Finest west- ern, 13 to 13%c ; eanterna, 13•'.; to 12%c. Butter --Fall creamery, 23e; Winter creamtry, 22e. Eggs --New laid, 23c per dozen. UNITED STATES MARKETS. Milwaukee, Mar. 2 -Wheat, firm; No. 1 Northern, $1.17!x; No. 2 Northern, $1.15 to 81.15! ; May, $1.16 bid. Rye --No. 1, 79c. Corn -May, 65%c bid. Barley -Stand- ard, (l6go; sample, 6-1 to C6'/c; No. 3, 64 to 65c; No. 1, ate. Minneapolis, Mar. 2. --Wheat - May, $1.12;,; ; July, $1.12%; cash. No. 1 hard, $1.14% to $1.14%; No 1 Northern, $1.13% to 81.13%; No. 2 Northern, $1.11% to 81.11%; No. 3 Northern, $1.08 to 81.10. Bran - $23 to $2:3.50. Flour -First pat- ents, $5.55 to 85.65; second patents $5.40 to 85.50; first clears, $1.10 to $4.25; second clears, $3.0,5 to 83.15. Duluth, Mar. 2. -Wheat. -No. 1 hard, 81.14'x; No. 1 Northern, $1.- 134; No. 2 Ne,rtltern, 81.11%; May, $1.12%; July. $1.13' i ; Sept., $1.07%. LIVE STOCK MARKET. A despatch from London says: Tor•,nt•e. Mar. 2. -The top price The Chronicle says thal. in 1°03, plid far export steers awe% 5.40, and exclu ail e of conversion loans, near- fe,r heavy hulls, 81.53. F'ar to good ly £30,070.000 worth of British ea- loads of exporters' realized Prem pital went t-, Canada. It remarks etre t,, ,t5.:►.3, with a steady de - that it. is a<1:1 that the ter,ff reeve- :,trial for more. But: her-('heiee• ers ih , affect se 'ale's ke"nae:•:, , cr.,t.c wrra firm at Cart. Medium upon a lonii! prefsra.1 • ,i •ti'd :i light q•, v t sht�:l test ^• the r alit were s Cady. ' • r'. f ria r:t ?;3.75 to 84; eommon itritis., c .a i in c+1:.,1'.11 cc . e:..'- c,,t:. end ranrerg net wnnted n;'d wont. (slightly lower. Ono good load of SOUL 1118 OWN SECRET. Deeper Something WL,hin Us Whloh Makes Real Character. Every human being is a. conun- drum to every other human being. No matter how transparent the in- dividual seems, or how open and above board, as wo may say, hie life, depend upon it, his soul is his own secret. He knows how much of a humbug he is, how far short ho really comes of being what people think him. He knows swhether he is genuine or not, and tit is this deeper something within us that snakes the real character, that is dimly perceived or seduous ly concealed until some sudden temptation or emergency brings it forth. When our friends surprise us by manifestations of unsuspected 'heights or depths, wo are not to believe those things aro born of a moment; they aro really deep- seated. Those qualities aro part of the secret itself -the self that makes us what we are, that will ene day reveal itself, that is bound to bo disclosed as age wears on." "My mind to me a kingdom is," said the poet. Ho meant some- thing omo- thing nearer the heart of things. This secret, hidden self, whose weaknesses and faults we try to hide, whose Life is lived bovond the eyes of men, is our real kingdom. It is the dwelling of the kingdom of heaven, or of the other place. 1 PELLETIER PARTY SIFE. Aerival at Churchill in Good Shape in January. A despatch from Winnipeg says: Inspector Pelletier and party of the Royal Northwest Mounted Po- lice, who were thought to have been lost in the northern wilds, ar- s n have been managed wt • rived at Churchill safe and well in skill and despatch. Tho night January. Those were the glad tid- guard made his usual round at 8 ings brought down by Constables Brown and Wood, who arrived at Gimli, on Lake Winnipeg, on !Thursday with the Churchill mail packet. They also give the infor- mation that Inspector Pelletier is on his way out, and will reach Win- nipeg in a few days. Constables Brown and Wocxl report severe weather in the north, which dela;- ed their progress; otherwise they had an uneventful trip. o clock on Wednesday morning, knocking the bars off the cells pre- paratory to letting the occupants out, to work. Labourdette and Stanton had evidently tampered with the lock, and when the night guard's back was turued, after the bar had been dropped, all they had to do was to push the dour open and sneak away. Having loft the cells the pair climbed up the hot water pipes to a window and es- caped. They have not been cap- tured. C. P. R. BUYS BONDS. President Says Company Had 85,000,000 to Sparc. A despatch from Montreal says: Sir Thomas Shaughnessy on Wed- nesday confirmed the rumor that. the C. P. R. had been purchasing Dominion debentures. Ho said the company had some money to spare, and had invested $5,010,000 in the Dominion three and three-quarter per cent. ten-year debentures, re- eently issued in London. "We bought these debentures," he said, • `because we considered them a good and sound investutont " TRAIN TOPPLES OVER CLIFF. ^ Fall of 100 FeetDemolishes Cars and Kills 25 Passengers. A despatch from Guayaquil, Ecuador, says: A passenger train on the main line bound north was to day thrown over a cliff 100 feet high, at a point bear Rio Mamba, and crashed to the bottom of the ravine. All the ears were practi- cally demolished. Twenty-five per - sells were killed and 40 were wounded. The accident was caused by a displaced rail. il.1N!TOIt.1 'Fl:,,!:l'ldo\ I:S. Cheaper Rn!ev l nder Cosernul,•nt Oe urrship. FOUR ACCUSED OF MUREDR. Man With Whom They t.Jad Been Drinking Beaten to Death. A despatch from Prince Albert, says : Four men, Robert Umphro- ville. John Turner, Alex. Unbois and Tom Ballantyne, aro held at the Mounted Police barracks here. charged with the murder of J. An- derson last November at Kinistino. Tho five were drinking together and left for home. Later Ander- son's body was found with the head battered in. BLOWN FROM ('.IR. Grated Trunk Brakeaman Killed Near Cornwall. A despatch from Cornwall eaye: At. an early hour on Thursday morning C' arles Sams, of Brock- ville, n brakeeman on a westbound G. T. R. freight train, was blown from the fop of a car near Sum- merstown, and striking the side of his head, was instantly killed. Ho was not missed till the train had run several miles. 4~- MONTRI; t1.'S ASMESSMENT. i•:xenmpt Property Valued at Sixty. four Millions. A despatch frena Montreal says: According to civic statistics, the exempted property in Montreal now runs up to ewer sixty-four mil- lion dollars in value. The figures for 1997 are !.5,914.313. and for 1903 A despatch from Winnipeg says: they show $';t,335,5Is. The value The long -expected aneoun oaneet of of tax.elde prop'rty in the city a reduction i-1 telephone rates was during the past year hes risen from n ed,.. in the Legislature on Thurs- 8210,8.0,719 to 8234,h21,903, ars in - day by Hen. Robert Rogers. The cr^a: e of $17,941.`.04. cut substantial, though not ... .__ �{•__�_ so muds is was anticipated. The The fat n'nn who ss%s t►•at be price for i.l►?ia"3 'p 1 ,rl^s is t) hn wield not let any woman order hint $ifs. in'•to1d ..1 05'); resi'Ient:11 about I.ec-,nics the most docile in 'nhore•. 825 instead of Pao. mad (amide Ir rnesr when a little hesr- c'egk 'phones, C0 instead of 6!2. dreei iweurd wife (ekes hint in k uJ.