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A • •• 111•111MMID .11111•••• REPORTS FROM THE LEiDING nAPPENINGS FROM ALL OVER TRADE CENTRES. - THE GLOJIIE.. fp••_, • „. • — ••••:„„..- r - • • l'ilees'ef Utile, Orsini Chere' '114. Telesi'llhie- B.: tle.,h1._..}:r,!16*(1.,"!,,7 : - . • ' • " • 1i.._rvo •1rDaley_, • •- • *:., ,-.••. . ,-. and:Other, Ceintrlesi.,4!., ,,•:.; , ' - • • 0he..,c,ill01•1!. 0. : ': •,.:,..,:,..._•' , -,,•• . • • .‘• :• • • .,..si ,. 1!iii..,ef a_iiii_,:':&..,14ii:44 .:'..;.,::;':-:::...'. '..:2`.;''1'.;:!:'::81?.e,‘..'10t:',),?'Ireskios:•'-,' , RE•41)myroo.,:,,,.:...•"`..'•'v.r ' ,.,.ti./.;.0,13:t.atNuA,.:),,Ag'...,• .-,...,:;• I,: •`:•'' •i• .,,,,.. To. r, a rtt‘o.. r, kus,•„•• , •.....,:,..4....0,„ ..,..n. ,tu,,,, :Id, ,.. •.,vir; h, is.,- ,t.. • ,•:,,,i' ..,z,.„2.*0•,), . ` • ..,-, i ...- • • .., i.• -'1',...: .. ,-' ' ',.;''';'• • . . r. ,, .t... . ... , 4. ' • • • 9 113 ar,wotk --()14.:11••1,111'4-111-°at,`31044rat':4*40. 111‘,B°!ntf-:: -.•••••••.;,..'",•!...1' .-,.„'• ' ,fti40.410„:4AIYAS,;:U•t,'47•• *Z:41:14041k ,::/itikatOViiIVII(bia:;;QUOtlItiAllirt. ,i•14..6.:14:414r-f4'`i)lxiiiiie:14-11da*,',turiili;it. Wiii'lligait ._.:13144dila. ,..Ri•o•'.'.1:titirtli,;: It94,,,99,10. ',;.' ..‘;',!..: /4' ,, :. , • gr11,.:'114103.;:: No.-•- northern, ' $1.`• -,``• It:111.,‘.:Yrice,, a farinot-o/ Otonabee 0734; No. 3 norther, $1.06%.- - :. township, ' is a, 'eousiri of" Lord Barley -No. 2, 58c to 60c, -mit- ,Robetts: ,. . Bide; No. 3X, 50e to 57e. '. • Fred Howe, a clerk in -HaMiltan ‘Bran --Quoted at. $16 to $18 per City.Ifill,. W443 fined 81 for loitering ton in bulk;• outside;. in bags, $2 on:the sideialk. • ' ' MOM.. - ' A..1/. Pridy was arrested at Win- - ••,:',clorii--_lio.-;;-.3 ',yellow -,•••nominsd:latlia&kergor , robb_ing7thertnialia...4414, Fon 8234e -to ,830. Lindsay council has authorized a Oats -Ontario No. 2 white, nom- $10,000 issue of debentures to pur- inal, 44e to 46c outside ; Manitoba, chase an ozone filtration plant. • No. 2, 48c, lake ports; No. 3, 46%c; Hamilton Board of Health want rejects, .45c. - bulk out milk dealers. to place their names Shorts -$20 to $21 in - on bottles, and be responsible for side ; in bags $2 more .• . ••• ••• ; •,... , /Torn :*-414•4440*.:14.444:;;Attuk3).14‘41i, :eXpec4eil theta to be'41pit* AnStiktiAti't4.26•`•:'..‘ililekik\*1:1! tbo 1.4-iteraiskflie't fel!..r.'in' June, 'Way frcini.' a, w`eek.. to ,ten' di)* later made inany people ' Worry than either the'..year 1900; or 1905. that. the ,pountry was get- Viking the'coaritry'froni end to ting too much, there .is a very gen- however,:conditiomi deijciedly • -_-'•-1,.tra „complaint of•Want of ram, and better fol. reaping, viithout damage, has' undenbtedly lessened , the 24n average crop, so lar• as .yield is *rage Yield, to what percentage .7.71inTF:the ,thr.ashing-...-zuscluncs.:.can ..-~#"-..telL-'7'riCitrefulr±readingtoli:ilarre;•-• much earlier than' last year, ;Vivi!' mit be a very earlr.harvest, fOialthOirgli-iin light land consider- co'ncerned, and' much more than an vorage..crop-lorAtiality. „ crow_Lon7the-se•'reage, now in, crably over a hundred million bush- els,- though how much over, it is difficult to say. • , THREW MAN OVERBOARD... •••••••••11. Heartless Action at Mate of the Steamier Standard. •Aftuspatch from Kenora says: , During an altercation on Monday afternoon on board the steamer Standard, _a work boat of Sutton & 47-44,A,!*447,TA'A'N' -AMMO& Thelti " re overboard a "'young Scotchman named Robert Mc- , '.Kay. All means were taken to res. eue him, but without avail, and dur- ing-tho excitement that followed the •, Swede disappeared. A search for -OM BEE SIA1 E R. $, Big Cut in Prices Announced in the • • West OR Wednesday. A despatch from Winnipeg says: 'Considerable reduction in the price of, lumber was announced on Wed- nesday. Shiplap and boards have been reduced $5.60 per thousand, • making the new price $17 per thou- sand.' There is also a reduction in t price of dimension lumber of .50 per thousand, which brings it down to $19 per thousand. This •••• _applies to.all lumber from British .Columbia and western points. 41, •" 87,1411 ALIENS NATURALIZED.. • Have Become BMW' Subjects Since 1902. A despatch from Ottawa says: Ac- cordinfir to returns received at the, tate Department, 87,404 aliens have taken out naturalization pap- " ars •as British subjects in Canada • he Act went,into effect in 1902. 906, and Dec. -8 1907, the num- ring the periletween July 1st, her naturalized was 17,714, of whom 4-;:, 7,279 were from the United. States, and 300 were Japanese. PLAGUE SWEEPS RUSSL4. Condition of Towns Opens Way for • Cholera Harvest.. the contents. • Flour -Manitoba, firat patents, Isaac Eicigliano, the Italian, want - $6 ; seconds, $5.40; strong -bakers' ed et Sault Ste Marie for the mur- 85:30; Ontario winter wheet pat- der of a fellow -countryman, was ar- zested in Michigan and brought back. ••. • Nova Scotia is sending tho Prin- ceas.of Wales a mink coat with fur NOttidtilitiMtraiii*V144, karat gold worth about $8,000. Brockville boys teased an old man named Kenvile until he pielspd up a stone and struck George Whaley in thelace, inflicting an injury that willdisfigure_hira for life A despatch from St. Petersburg ents, $3.20 to $3.30. says: Tho cholera that has made its appearance in Russia this year is most virulent. Out of 12 cases in , 4•46., C1P4^111PCTi htV44 AVM , 1,4k COUNTRY PRODUCE. Butter -Receipts- aro still large P t‘iranii,b,s4i4jAvtina,113PIVIMATME e' " ' • ccor mg to invest&A iga na A b rn reaery, prints. .24c ..... 24c to 26c Deputy Von Anrey,` who is a dis- I•do solids .... 23c to 24c tinguishcd medical authority, tho Dairy prints, choice 23c to 24c sanitary conditions in the Volga do ordinary .... 21c to 22c towns aro horrible. The absence of Dairy, tubs .... 21c to 220 a sewerage system and water works Inferior .." ... 17c to 180 he -in babitan tlitrePritiOMIC:nitlethd-thofera-willaAtilid-13e1O-13W-fdr Eggs -Prices aro easier at 20c to 21c. • Beans -Prices aro $2 to 82.10 for prime•and $2.10 to $2.20 for hand- picked. Potatoes-Ontarios, 90e to $1.15 per bushel; Ameneans $3.35 to A despatch from Halifax says: 8.60 per barrel in car lots'on track To Nova Scotia Government's hero. Summer Crop Report has been issu- ed. Compared with' -the average crop of a normal year, the depart- ment makes the following estimate if six leading crops this season, ono hundred per cent. being taken as an, average. Hay, 90 per cent.; oats Palls, 12%c. and other grains, 97; potatoes and Smoked and Dry Salted Moats- YE BIRIII-TOITRIPLETS.- 00C11.4011 Celebrated is Great Style -- in Lachime Household. A despatch from Montreal says• .Mrs. Bertrand of Lachine gave birth to triplets on Tuesday. All three rkhale and hearty. She has been •tinttried six years, and has seven 'children. The house was decorated • on Wednesday in honor of the event, ana all and sundry were made wel- ,*•, come. -Ty-AittIL-8110C1K-AT-Q IYEREC- vy Daniels Ceases- In Centact WitLive Wire. • :A, despatch from Quebec says: , . While installing a motor in a cold- ;•-.; storage warehouse. on Wednesday • Mr. Percy Daniels received a shock • a live wire, as a result of which ; he died an hour later. Deceased - wail well known in Toronto, where 1 '7•• • -*' Some years ago he worked for the 'General Electric Company. He was a nephew of Xi: H. B. Angus'di- _L,...r r of the Bank of Montreal, an •• t lishman by birth, about 30 years till wo try,'and then very often we' store $1 17Y Winter firmer C 1 reap a MI harvest. •- NOVA SCOTIA'S CROPS. Government Summer Report Esti- mates Large Average. • 0 Gruesome • ITIIDEADIA 4 Cou nonce o a ee n er. - • alpine ...ex,- • • , ,••• • . .frOni`protkrille 48410, £1ft&d th*t was what e id; An old roan nulled William Dias has-been Iivin,g with Vickery,, who,is a. farmer at Lillies, a. few. Miles north of 'the 'town. Davis has been ailing for some eon- siderable timoliast, and finally Vick- ery lelt-,,that-lict.,-.ebuld: 145t !Aladin° •• iiiiibilktragri-- ng yarealove, etIT td‘fU• :for the purpose!:of hut: - • t, • tteate the, oopita . 1•140-",1411.4„,•'• •- ••••1 1410-1U46144t.bo, 1' 11 cornpsnson *sae , ' in, thei bnligy; head: Slighily ward on his 'chest,. atone dead,' As • • it. was net now a 'ctie"for the hos- pitar the only eourse left was -to,:- •, • summon the police and the coroner: ' ‘..No inqiiest .,, was • considered ne- cessary as the man, who was about •Aatur ;Ticker ,,,e-asinot4at a W IC . , •••,, LANDS WM DISAPPEAR VAST AREAS COVERED, BY OCEAN ONCE DRY LAND. Fortunately the Mightiest Changes Are Very Slowly Brought taagt4-Utt'atit5414AgaltlifolVEFX,A, Tho recent discovery that a group of little islands' some hundreds of miles south 'of Now Zealand were one() part af a great continental masa extending in all,Probability to lithe o—cir leaving only these remnants, calls attention to the fact that there aro vast areas .now covered by the sea which were once dry land. The pro- cess of disappearance.was very slow. It involved no cataclysm or sudden catastrophe overwhelming all ani- mal and vegetable life, but the work wepton century after century till great surfaces were a part of the sea floor. Events often occur that recall such vicissitudes. Not long. after Chile's beautiful port of Valparaiso was destroyed by earthquake on August 16 1906, the news came that the island of Mas a Tierra, on which Alexander Selkirk was cast away for Ave years, his unhippy fate suggest- ing, to Defoe the story of Robinson Crime, •• had sunk ' beneath the aver.;-- The story was incorrect, but, it_called again to mind the facts t!Y�bCldtprove111-artlie Juan Fernandez gronp, to which this island belongs, was formerly A PART OF -SOUTH AMERICA. Land once rose above the wide waste of waters that now separates the islands from the • mainland. Among the many woofs Of this may be mentioned here. only the two -varieties-efzhutmaing-birds-peculiar to Chile that have been seen on the islands ever since they were first visited. It is' not very uncommon for vol- ca.nic islands after they have been thrust above the' surface .to disap- pear again. The island Krakatoa was literally blown into the air by a world shaking explosion in Au- gust; 1893, and the great wave that resulted, over 100 feet high, swePt. over the northern coast of Java, drowning 30,000 people. PROVISION MARKET. Pork -Short cut, 823.50 per bar- rel ; meas, 819 to 813.50. - Lard -Tierces, 12c; tubs, 12%c; Long clear bacon, 1154c tq7.11%e, roots, 105; apples, 100; plums, 90; Una and cases ; hams, medium and =all fruits, 90. light, 14%c .to 16c; hares large, , 12%c to 13c; backs, 17%c pto 18c; ii.- 'ELLINGTON'S ORDERS. shoulders, 10c to 10%e; rolls, 104c -- - —• -•- - - to Ile ; breakfast bacon, -16o to - Iron Duke Wrote Orders on Asses' lb%c; • green meats, out of piekle, _lc _less than smoked:- — 41••••10 Skins, which -were Returned. .. It has been stated that. the Duko of Wellington wrote his orders on horseback. Qn this point Priscilla, Lady Burghesh, questioned him and - received the following explanation : "He said it was his constant prac- tice in action, and peculiarly latter- ly, to write down the orders be sent by his aides de camp. Having found -that the verbal orders were -either incorrectly delivered or not compre- hended, he adopted the practice of cairying in his pocket loose sheets of 'asses' skin of the size of a large card (such as the invitaions from court are printed on) and a pencil, GREAT BRITAIN. Mr. Joseph Chamberlain is re- ported to be in a very grave condi- tion. A British board will inquire into the methods of preserving moat. Mr. Lloyd -George blames the ex- penditure on armament for Ger- many's distrust of Britain. Three hundred British members of Parliament aro pledged to the re- moval of the cattle embargo. The delegates attending the Uni- vcrisal Peace Congress in London were welcomed by the King and Queen, Sir Edward Grey warmly repudi- ates the idea that-Uritain's foreign policy is aimed at the isolation of Germany. To prevent further friction with Lord Charles Barash:1rd, Sir Percy Scott has-been-app?inted to a new command. - - MONTREAL MARKETS. Montreal, Aug. 4. -Flour -Mani- toba spring wheat patents, $6.10 to 80.20; second patents, 85.50 to $5.- 70: winter wheat patents, $5 to 85.50; straight rollers, $4.25 t� '4.50; in bags, $1.05 to 82.10, ex- tra_,- $1.50 to $1.70. Rolled flats -$2.50 in bags -of -DO pounds. Oats -No. 2,- 480; No. 3, 47c ; -re- jected, 46c. Cornmeal -$1.85 to $1.95 per -bag. Millfeed-Onterio bran, in bags, $20.50 to $21.50; 'shorts, 823 to $24; Manitoba bran, in bags, $22 to $23; and wheesend he had an order to he wrote it with his pencil. on one shorts, 1024 to 925. Provisions - Barrels short *_cut side of those sheets in his hand, the mess, 822.50; half barrels, '911.50; aides de camp standing at his, clear fat. backs, $23; dry salt long horse's head the while:" I clear backs, lle ; barrels plate beef, As an evidence of the Duke's $17.50; half barrels do., $9; corn - frugal mind it may be -added that pound lard, 331c to We; pure lard, aner_the_actien_.3v_as. skins were returned to- him to be •to 13X,c; hams, 124c to 14e, ac cleaned and used over again. • cerding to size; breakfast bacon, Lct us conclude with an interest- f 14e to 15c; Windsor bacon, 15c to ing •note concerning the young 1Gc; fresh killed abattoir. dressed Queen Victoria. "yesterday, corn- hogs $9.75 to $10; live, 86.85 to ing out of town, we met the Queen ' 97. driving in an open carriage; and I' Eggs -Selected stock, 23c; No. • 1, saw her so well ; in a white chip bon- 20c. and No. 2, 16c per dozen. net, veil?' pretty and neat, smiling, Chcose-Westerns aro quoted at and looking pleased and happy. She' 12c to 12%0 and 'cisterns at 11%c •was quite a pretty girl, with• s' 11%c• peculiar sweet and intelligent coun- tenance." . UNITED STATES MARKETS. • f, Buffalo, Aug. `4. -Spring wheat- , We never know what e can do Fitmer; Nd. - Northern, carloads,, •,of age, and unmarried. aro sorry .we found out. • • 1110E 'WERE OFF 11 • • hpir -A1j4ence--Fiom.7 itesp atch from London says: • bile the British submarine not* . 'r: la VAS manoeuvring off' Folkestone, NoAi/ was teen to be falling Pe- ',.1.hindtctlying a. 'Of distress. A' -;;;:resctio,party was organized, and the erew,.consisting of two .0Mcerir and • • lane . men, were found unconscious It • •, in * th& boat; Seems that, the officers were in the -;conning tower.- and, noticing ;that; no •ettention was paid, to the :Signal they sent below, deicentied the ,lia het and saw'the; crew lying ti conscious from the fumes petrol, to , which' they, too, fell •,•:-'sietinis. The 'men were finally re - :1i; sateeitaileal Misa being _bresight to the ''ispea$sar. The' accident; which migbt occur.at any.time inany sub- marine, was due to the failure of certain springs to work properly on account of the rolling of the boat. These springs aro connected with the valves by which the noxious gases aro expelled from the boat. , It had been the custom until re- cently for British submarines to carre white mice in the well. These! little animals are ppeuliarly susecp-, Uble to the fumes of ',tiro!, and as the heavy gas invades the well. first their squeaking serve* as a' **riling in the case of -an accident 1 like theNrecent one. Several weeks ago the British Admiralty ordered that the mice should be' eareed no • * UNITED STATES. North Dakota is to erect a monu- ment to Theodore Roosevelt. 'A negro charged with assaulting a white woman waa burned at the stake by a mob in the public square at Greenville, Texas., GENERAL. Turkish Moslems are now strong- ly pro -British. W. K. Vanderbilt's stepson was killed in a motor car accident in. Franco. A Chinese voilel foundered in a typhoon near Clanton and '300 per- sons were drowned. Gen. Von der Goltz, of the Ger- Min airing, will reorganize the Turk- ish army. . Clark • Kennedy, the Englishman who was captured by Moorish bri- gands, 'has been released. • . ---- SENTENCE SERMONS. Pertified virtue is but vice. • You. cannot work for -God without love for men. A deadhead is almost sure to be -a blockhead. • Sighing for a lost, Eden will not make a new earth. - • - Easy street is not a thoroughfare, to heaven. The double faced man • always is convincing -to himself. • There is no love in the charity that does not court secrecy. Many an allianee---Witli-alii- hu.den.by_a defiance of the 'devil. -Lower; No. 3 yellow, 82c; No. 4 y.. No father ever lost any of the 81c ;• No. 3 Corn, 60e; No 4 corn, 79e; No. '3 wbite, 84c. Oats time he,sperit with his'children. -Lower; No. 2 White, 62)1e; No.. The man with inany corns always 3 white, 61e; .No. 4 white, 60c. Bar- wants to•go barefoot in the crowd. ley -Feed to, maltingt 60 to 05c. People ."with putty heads usually • New Yoik; Ang. 4. -Spot steady.; like to think that, they have brittle rod, pWe to $1 elevator; No. hearts. • • - 2. $1.00 f.o.b. afloat; No. 1 north- Talking, inoonshipe about being ern Duinth,_: 91.22X, • f.o.b. efloati otinshiny reoke...thia world SvO: 2 lliffOIXTii.b. an's* flea ' 1 . , , ieetredi-itrilbAting TiiL **•".•"*"-‘4, 11-.'anitriii-d.' fiiid-how---suetWi CAICIDA'S "468 ' • • — It.takes more_ than '"Kcep ofLthis g. Ogns to tilark the_ path. of To Cemeat ,,Britalies Friendship rass" . ' With Veiled States. 17FIC)ltiho 6x.iiike' their • time. from A despatch from London Says : The everY'clock• are always mire the sun Daily Telegraph says -ttie Quebed jg off hi o schedule. ' . battlefields will be halloired • ground, Mank. are. sell red • on life beCanse consecrated forever to the genius of they have been trying to make its Canadian 'nationality within the spice do for the bread of life. pire, which will ione day plsya great Lots of 'pople woula have.* *bed art in the world's' -tritium • The ilweinal•rnorc faith an the A 17. hty: if iiiwouldhow more dociiityto thir: When 'a man steals the lihney from *In' be *always tellhimself that he will-nv, for it with thZ!..eoin of re- Tienttike. ' ' , i*i•sty.to shsit ntitt.Yes to the ,whois• dorn Ming lisinds '.sire • rnk- .mttrtie orie•--who -• ."'. ighest mission of Caned* is to stand betiveen Ev•iln and , the 'United States, holding each by the hand. The times p% s the highest tri - *lite to the stic-e: s nf thn Tetienten- ar. It payNtir(1-ti tps nil r fo be trre` to lyr-r" •-' tcr gr•-,of••tri- elti-on4•• •• ond.to • •I , A ,'` • • ; - • • ' — — avvflonsraomomiglapriattrmsurier, , "i"Attl$144517f6.`"iil*eat"*.i;'tiVielilt24"Atli"1"41134.444:11' Ili' 412:2biciarMitP3 • ./1404'4VZVIZAW273;ifi. Enicen _Istand_came. aboe -the -Pacificnearly- twenty years ago, sank again in about ten years and once more has cOme into. view. A part of Bogaslov..on the Alaskan coast dilappeareil lifter a few years and other land has recent- ly risen in the same neighborhood. Far out in the Pacific in 1904, near the Bonin Islands, a fiew bit of land rose above the sea; and the Japaneae raised their flag over it and gave 'it. the nameofNushima to their- iie- quiiiition. !Chas slipped from their grasp, however, for .the follewing. year it melted away to nine feet aboveit leveliutd the last vestige of it has now disappeared: • Ferdinandea, which rose above the Mediterranean in 1831, had a siniilar history, with the additionof • • • A' HUMOROUS ELEMENT. • The whole world- talked about it, and all the more because England and the King of the Two Sicilies dis- puted over its possession. . • It came majestically into view on July 8 and about the middle of Au- gust it was impoaing to look upon as its broad expanse towered 200 feet above the sea. But its life was short. Diplomatic explian• - COUO lett in rm t ough polite lan- guage, were' gill in progress when the waves closed above the island in December. A coral island is sometimes torn tq ieces b a reset storm; showing_-_, • MY than one. Thia happened to the Anatol! in the Marshall group in 1905, when it happened to bo in the pith of a terrible hurricane. Waves about forty feet high swept over the hapless speck of land,. carrying every particle of verdure and every form of life into the sea, and not a human being was saved. The upper part of the coral was broken off and swept away, and.,a0 few dap; later nothing but the placid waters of the ocean were seen where the anatoll had stood. • But 'such events are a part of our • modern history and hese little re- semblance to` the mighty•movements - that have buried wide lands beneath the sea. North of Europe is the shal- low Barents Sea, whose bottom geologists now have no doubt was . 'once above the water, so that, Nova Zambia; Spitzbergen and Frans Jo_st_Land_Were _ , •• A PART OF EUROPE. Iceland, southern' Greenland and a few other islands are all that -is- - - • left abovo water of the great land bridge that once joined Europe and • America, though we find in the sub- marine ridge that extenuis all the way from Iceland to Scotland a part • of the foundation of that hind. It has- been-ferseinetime condu.• sively proved that a land mass Once connected- Madagascar with south- ern India and,. Ceylon,allowing the. passage from Asia, to*Africaof -land animate whose- appearance in the West was once regarded as inexplic= able. So the rock crust of the earth has itscalamities and its revolutionslike • - the human race' that •lives on h. Fortunately the Mightiest and most far reaching of these disturbances - are not cataclysmal and the changes are..very.slowly -broughtabout. • ..,',;•"7,••• _ A VACATION! • A life insurance policy. A 'smile on the face of Father Time. An investment in the Bank of Health. The slot into which your savings drop. • The funny supplement of life's news- paper. • The, sugar coating to the bitter. pill of work. An addition in health by a sub- traction hi wealth. • ' • • A rest wherein you work harder in spending your money than you ever - did inearning it: 4 ALL0WEBk FATALDOS • _ • • - LOsiei in' Stok Market,,Cause__Sutoide,:.__Qt.,.:::.-.:JL:;:11 Montreal Broker. A despateli from Montreal says: The business men receved.a shock ck.Wodriesday when it was -learned that Mr',- Victor Gray, promie- itocibrOker, hid. Committed suicide during the night. by awl; lowing chlora '• He was despond- ent over. heavy losses and had been tinatle -to- sleep for -.soine tiine. Tuciday'ninlit • he ' *eta to. a' hotel Ilia city and about 3.Vii called up ,fr. Po1,birt,africd ih West ati t.• • . . . ...• - hotel., where be found: Gray' ling.., • , , ill his bed unconscious : An ambu- •-•-•. .' - -- ;•', . lance was summond. and he was •.. , speedily conveyed. to'. the 'Royal Victoria Hospital, where everything was done to,ave his life, but death • ensued this morning. Mr. Gray was a member of the Ann of J. IL: Dun Company,and was 'a meniVer of the Montreal Stock Exchange. He WAS about 33 •-'' years of ag,, and a year ago mar. , led Miss. Clayton of Ottawa His and:bd' him • goi•xlbye,saystip tit ome was originally in * alifax, % ''.•4 a5 tt, for the !an' time.. His fri1 .1end where 11hai aister living tii-th4 Sent:7 • .• • ,.*• - ",:•••;•,• i,'"•:••••44•,• • " • ixtvareift,`,045170&'440'44$443,410:4*114kiit4ft 1•*.LT.41••Zr4401:8V1$40,174,iiire•44417tilftfgf•AMOTMlZ.ZiKigettZtor'ZirtntrYtAargirdieOrAtiliAttik91/2kftSc" 14TOPArtitt • . '• 4 .‘ • • , ;.; v,..yavt.,..i44.0...4.-iiiduzliqw#41,112.4.thaemittalv.=.44.9.',..d.,;.,,,,o,444,4.,....vanpavt•olge4ai. • iitirgtatorteopraistateatra. r i• • .• 4 'a • 1, '70 . • „ • , • •• • • • 4 3, .44 • e ,^`^t "e'” • • •^ t. "". , A , •04.0. "' 00... 00°'.; •,0...1.4.,r '0 • ' •A.A.‘ " " : • ".t „” •^, • ",r,‘ ,p•